AN INTERVIEW IN THE WEEKLE MAGAZINE “EL VALLENC”- NOVA CONCA
BACK PAGE
JAUME GUBIANAS JOVES
Painting is for me an essential and vital fact very close to fanaticism
Jaume Gubianas was born on the 22nd December (1)
in 1923, in Barcelona into a large and humble family with art
aspirations. He attended the Montesori School for his Primary education.
Years later, he would start his bachelor’s degree in the Maragall High
School and would end it in Menéndez y Pelayo High School within the
post-war period. Simultaneously, he would attend drawing and painting
lessons in La Llotja. After that, he would enter the Fine Art School
until he finished all his studies when he would start teaching in both
public and state schools.
During
the course of his long live, he showed his work in several exhibitions,
both in personal and collective art galleries. The first one was the
Mediterranean Art Gallery in May 1942, participating in the National
Fine Art Exhibitions (2). We can find some of his work in different private collections from France, the USA, Australia and Germany.
Question: When did you start having the love of paining?
Answer: As far as I can
remember, colours would arouse an irresistible attraction on me. Since I
went to Primary School, Art was one of my favourite subjects. A nice
anecdote to remember those times would be when I was drawing in La Seu
de Manresa, from the balcony of my parents’, and suddenly saw a fly-man
climbing the wall of the church to raise the Catalan flag high above the
bell tower, it was on the 14th April in 1931
Q: Does the proliferation of painters make you think that the art of painting is easy and accessible to most of the people?
A: Mediterranean people
have a painting bent due to the lighting and richness of colours, and
this goes in hand with a huge amount of great educated painters. I would
say this has created an environment of liking. I personally do not
believe that any kind of art is easy for many people. Art is complicated
and the result of art depends on what one might want to express.
Picasso was made a similar question by the dancer Xunga, and he answered
the following: “painting is the easiest art for those who are not
artists”. I do not think that painting seriously is an enjoyable way to
spend the time.
Q: Which skills do you think are necessary to succeed in this trade?
A: This question leads to another one: To which kind of success are we referring, the artistic or economic one?
On the one hand, if we refer to it as
artistic success, I would say that honesty and modesty are those skills
which, in combination with patience and perseverance, may contribute to
the reach of both a personal and artistic success.
One should take into account their own feelings, escaping from the contemporary tendencies, main streams and opportunist people. Before anything else, an artistic success should reflect the own expressions and deep emotions of the artist.
One should take into account their own feelings, escaping from the contemporary tendencies, main streams and opportunist people. Before anything else, an artistic success should reflect the own expressions and deep emotions of the artist.
On the other hand, an economic success
must be taken as an addition to the artistic one, rather than as the
engine that motivates the artist.
Q: What is painting for you?
A: Painting is for me
an essential and vital fact to the extent that verges on fanaticism. I
cannot conceive existence without the anxiety and the feelings that
painting provokes. For me, painting is like a challenge, picture after
picture, trying to hinder myself and observing what others have not done
yet to be the first one in doing it. When I paint, I find myself
further away, in a different dimension.
Q: Who is the painter you admire the most?
A: There are lots of
painters whom I admire, so it is pretty difficult to name just one.
However, since the question is very specific, I may say that Dominicus
Tehotucopulis –El Greco-, and, if I am allowed to mention another name,
because otherwise I would not feel satisfied, I may say that Vicent is
another painter I esteem.
Q: When did your vocation for painting started?
A: I couldn’t say when
exactly, I would say it has always been part of me. I would start going
out to paint with some colleagues. We created different groups of
painters, the Tiana group, the Platjeta group, and many others so far;
but now I work alone with enthusiasm and excitement.
Q: Is there any interesting spot to paint in Bràfim and the outskirts?
A: I believe that is
not a matter of finding an interesting spot, but of being a good
painter. Every landscape is interesting in some or another moment thanks
to the light, so that is the reason why a scenery might be interesting
in the morning or, on the contrary, in the evening, depending on how
the light comes into contact with it.
Q: Which kind of painting do you prefer?
A: All plastic ways of
expression, from etching to dry point, from a pen to ink, the
watercolour to the oil painting depicting almost every possibility. I
find all these techniques really interesting and I try to alternate them
all to avoid tiredness.
As for the themes, I think that it is important to alternate the figure, the portrait, the seascape and the landscape.
As for the themes, I think that it is important to alternate the figure, the portrait, the seascape and the landscape.
Q: Would you give any piece of advice to those who are beginning?
A: What I would say is
that once the problem of any painting technique is solved, they should
try to be themselves, given that this would be the main problem. A work
of art will endure if there is emotion and personality on it.
Q: Would you consider yourself a painter or an artist?
A: This is quite an
interesting question, since I always do the following in order to come
to a conclusion. Vicente López was a great and extraordinary painter;
Francisco de Goya –a contemporary of him- was also a great artist. A
more recent example is Zuloaga, a great painter and Solana, a great
artist.
Artists go over the concept of craft,
which is generally linked to the technique and virtuously away from
emotion and personality. From the coldness in the eyes of many present
painters, the artist usually falls into what is often considered faulty
from an academic point of view.
Pere Vives
(1) He was born on the 25th December.
(2)
The first exhibition he took part in was the National Fine Arts held in
Barcelona, in June 1942. The second one was held in La Libería
Mediterránea (The Mediterranean Library), in March 1943.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario