Manolo Valdés
Framed: 26 in x 22 in
Further images
Doble Imagen reflects Manolo Valdés’s longstanding engagement with art history, identity, and the transformation of classical imagery through contemporary form. Known for reinterpreting iconic motifs from artists such as Velázquez, Matisse, and Picasso, Valdés approaches historical reference not as direct homage, but as a process of reinvention, distilling familiar visual languages into bold, tactile compositions that feel both timeless and unmistakably modern.
Created in 1998, Doble Imagen exemplifies Valdés’s mature graphic practice and his ongoing exploration of duality, fragmentation, and formal reduction. Through layered forms and simplified figuration, the composition emphasizes mass, silhouette, and texture over descriptive detail. The image oscillates between abstraction and representation, allowing the figure to emerge through compressed shape and material presence rather than narrative specificity.
Characteristic of Valdés’s work from the 1990s, the composition demonstrates the artist’s interest in reducing historical imagery to its essential structural elements while preserving a strong psychological and physical presence. The etching process, combined with unique color collage elements, creates a richly textured surface that reinforces the tactile quality central to Valdés’s work across painting, printmaking, and sculpture.
Historically, Valdés emerged in Spain during the 1960s as a co-founder of the influential collective Equipo Crónica, a group that used appropriation and visual quotation to critique politics, mass media, and the legacy of art history during the Franco era. Following the dissolution of the group, Valdés developed an independent artistic language that bridged classical European painting traditions with contemporary abstraction and material experimentation.
Executed with remarkable economy and formal clarity, Doble Imagen demonstrates Valdés’s ability to transform historical reference into a contemporary visual experience rooted in texture, monumentality, and psychological resonance. The work reflects the artist’s enduring interest in the persistence of images across time and the continual reinvention of art historical memory through contemporary form.
Beautifully preserved and presented, Doble Imagen stands as a compelling example of Valdés’s sophisticated fusion of printmaking, collage, and painterly abstraction.
Join our mailing list!
* denotes required fields
We will process the personal data you have supplied to communicate with you in accordance with our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.
