2009
2009 2009 > Matta

 


 

Matta [Roberto Sebastián Antonio Matta Echaurren] (Chile, active France, Italy, Mexico, and the United States, 1911-2002)
Burn, Baby, Burn (L'escalade), 1965–1966
Painting, oil on canvas, 117 5/16 x 386 1/4 in. (298 x 981 cm)
Gift of the 2009 Collectors Committee with additional funds provided by the Bernard and Edith Lewin Collection of Mexican Art Deaccession Fund
M.2009.42

Burn, Baby, Burn is an iconic painting by one of Latin America's greatest masters. Although Matta was born in Chile, he is the quintessential peripatetic artist. Trained in architecture, from 1935 to 1937 Matta worked with Le Corbusier in Paris. In 1937 he traveled to Spain, where he met Salvador Dalí and André Breton and joined the Surrealist movement. Fleeing World War II, in 1939 Matta moved to New York, where he served as a bridge between the American and European avant-gardes and played a catalytic role in the development of abstract expressionism.

Soon after Matta took up painting in the late 1930s, he developed his signature style of webs of lines and changing forms that give his compositions atmospheric depth. He coined the terms "psychological morphologies" and "inscapes" to describe these images. In the 1950s and '60s Matta's work took a new direction, as he became increasingly aware of the atrocities of war, racial discrimination, and man's destructive potential. Burn, Baby, Burn is among his most powerful works, reflecting this shift from his more introspective, surrealist "morphologies" of the 1930s and '40s to his acute interest, as an artiste engagé, in the human condition.

Burn, Baby, Burn was initially inspired by the attacks of the Vietnam War. In 1965 the Watts riots erupted in Los Angeles when a California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer pulled over a black man on charges of drunk driving. Soon after, thousands of people began protesting the deepest discriminatory practices of the LAPD, reflecting the profound racial divisiveness of the city. Matta saw the Vietnam War and the Watts riots as connected. The cry "Burn, Baby! Burn!" was coined by the charismatic local radio giant Magnificent Montague, who would shout the phrase every time a piece of soul music got him excited. Listeners in Los Angeles appropriated the cry for the arson that marked the riots.

In Burn, Baby, Burn the viewer¹s eye moves incessantly from one point to another, echoing the bold dynamic and rhythmic sense of this quasi-galactic, futuristic composition. Through a powerful turbo-like shorthand, Matta conveys a sense of speed and dislocation. Signs are scattered throughout the surface: imploding satellites to the left, suggesting the velocity with which news travels, a bolting vehicle at the top speeding across a freeway, and a group of black heads in a vertiginous vortex to the right. The phosphorescent, pungent green at the bottom right of the composition suggests hope, a verdant future. Like Picasso's Guernica (1937)—a work that Matta greatly admired—Burn, Baby, Burn is a bold indictment of the destructiveness of mankind and a manifesto for peace.

The painting remained in Matta's collection until his death in 2002—a sign of the significance Matta attached to it. The accession of this monumental, mural-sized canvas marks an important moment in the development of our collection, one that is directly related to the history of Los Angeles.—Ilona Katzew, Curator Latin American Art, 2009.

See other works by Matta in LACMA's collection.
Latin American Art


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