Harper’s is pleased to present Broken Record, an exhibition of seven oil paint and fabric collages on canvas and five oil-stick drawings on paper by Angel Otero. Marking the artist’s first presentation at Harper’s, this show follows Otero’s several-year relationship with the gallery as a friend and collector, forged by a kindred interest in the interplay between books and art. Harper’s is open to the public seven days a week; no appointment is necessary to visit.
In his elaborately textural canvases, Otero harnesses the potential of painting to convey personal memory and identity through his practice. His work, which ranges from sprawling collages to thickly layered panels, departs from an innovative foundational technique: he paints representational imagery onto glass sheets, scrapes off the partially dried pigment, and reapplies the resulting “skins” onto a fresh surface to produce multi-layered compositions. This generative approach yields unexpected synchronicities of color and form, reinvigorating the visual languages of collage and painting through a gradual process of reuse and accumulation.
For this exhibition, Otero continues his practice of recycling and recombining layers of oil paint while mining his personal history and earlier figurative work for subject matter. Created in the solitude of upstate New York during the COVID-19 lockdown, they incorporate motifs inspired by his grandmother’s home in San Juan where the artist grew up; from wooden dining chairs and crisp white bathtub to potted plants and blue-tiled floors. Rather than recount specific narratives or experiences, these paintings explore the enduring weight of memory and the lingering impact of past experience. Otero extrapolates his childhood impressions into dizzyingly surreal compositions, while aggregating ambiguous visual markers extracted from hazy recollections. Plants sprout from sofa cushions, fish glide above domestic furnishings, and derelict ladders stretch off-frame in scenes that evoke the hypnagogic state between waking and dreaming. Marked by a frenetic energy that evinces the volatility of past and present crises, from the global pandemic to Puerto Rico’s earthquakes, these introspective works deftly consider painting’s ability to transport the past into the present and the personal into the universal.
Angel Otero (b. 1981, San Juan, PR) is a New York City–based artist. Otero received a BFA in 2007 and an MFA in 2009 from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and is the recipient of the Leonore Annenberg Fellowship in the Visual Arts. Solo exhibitions of his work have been organized at Harper’s, East Hampton (2020); Lehmann Maupin, New York (2019); Bronx Museum of the Arts (2017); and Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston (2016); among other venues. Otero’s work has been acquired by numerous public collections including the Berezdivin Collection, Santurce, Puerto Rico; DePaul University Museum, Chicago; Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, Istanbul; and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.