Art and culture

Louis Stettner
Tony, “Pepe y Tony, Pescadores españoles” (Pepe and Tony, Spanish fishermen), Ibiza, Spain, 1956
Fundación MAPFRE Collections
© Louis Stettner Estate, 2024
Louis Stettner
– 02
Centro Andaluz de la Fotografía (Almeria)
Social commitment. Poetry. Belief in the human being.
Louis Stettner (New York, 1922-Paris, 2016) was trained at the Photo League school in New York. In Paris he met Brassaï, who became his mentor. His experience as a photographer during the Second World War profoundly conditioned his understanding of life. This is reflected in his work, which is based on a firm belief in the human being.
Stettner’s work encompasses a multitude of subjects, from almost empty urban environments to bustling scenes of the New York subway, the routines of workers and laborers, and the mountainous landscapes of the French Alpilles massif in his later years.
Louis Stettner’s work was not given the recognition it deserved at the time. This exhibition aims to mitigate this lack of recognition and make the general public aware of the artist. It also celebrates the work of a creator whose photography captured the poetry of everyday life.

José Gutiérrez Solana
Máscaras bailando cogidas del brazo (Masks dancing arm in arm), ca. 1933 – 1934
Fundación MAPFRE Collections
© José Gutiérrez Solana, VEGAP, 2023
Solana the engraver. Fundación MAPFRE Collections
– 02
Museo Gustavo de Maeztu (Estella, Navarra)
Singularity. Eccentricity. Darkness.
Fundación MAPFRE has an important collection of José Gutiérrez Solana’s engravings, including twenty-six of the twenty-eight etchings catalogued by Rafael Díaz-Casariego and four of the seven surviving lithographs. These offer a representative view of the artist’s body of work, undoubtedly one of the most singular figures of 20th century ¬Spanish art.
Both his life and his work reveal an eccentric personality, impossible to pigeonhole within the framework of the conventional artistic scene.¬ Creating a deeply personal vision, in his paintings, etchings and lithographs, as well as in his texts, Solana seems to approach the Spanish literature of his time, although he remains oblivious to any sense of criticism or regenerationism. On the contrary, he shows us a dark reality within which he seems to move with absolute ease.

Nicholas Nixon
J.A., E.A., Dorchester, Massachusetts, 2001
Fundación MAPFRE Collections
© Nicholas Nixon
Nicholas Nixon
–
Cascais Cultural Centre (Cascais, Portugal)
Social concern. Simplicity. Intimacy.
Nicholas Nixon (Detroit, Michigan, 1947) explores singular worlds with notable social concern, revealing unnoticed aspects of reality pertaining to the artist’s private experiences. However, given their everyday nature, we can identify with them and they easily evoke in us the echo of memories and emotions. Nixon employs a simple, almost obsolete, but flawless technique; the use of large-format cameras imposes a closeness and the cooperation of the subjects to reveal nearby worlds which grab his attention: the elderly, the sick, the intimacy between couples and the family.
This retrospective on his work (1974-2024) features more than 200 photographs. In it we find a clear guiding thread, a world of its own that has no limits and an extraordinary capacity for reinvention.

Carlos Pérez Siquier
La Chanca, 1963
Fundación MAPFRE Collections
© Carlos Pérez Siquier, VEGAP, 2024
Carlos Pérez Siquier. Fundación MAPFRE Collections
–
Fundación MAPFRE Canarias (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria)
Identity. Spontaneity. Modernity.
The work of Carlos Pérez Siquier (Almeria, 1930-2021), who was awarded the National Photography Prize in 2003, emerges from a fertile space somewhere between spontaneity and an interest in the human condition, as well as the photographer’s own measured character. His images reveal the transformations of an entire country (and perhaps an entire world) from the peripheral surroundings of Almeria, where he lived throughout his life. Pérez Siquier was a key artist in the development of Spanish photographic modernity.
With this consideration in mind, in 2022, Fundación MAPFRE acquired an important sample of his legacy, which now forms part of the institution’s photography collections.
The exhibition Carlos Pérez Siquier. Fundación MAPFRE Collections comprises a careful selection of that archive and includes images from some of his most emblematic series, such as La Playa (The Beach), Encuentros (Encounters) and Trampas para incautos (Traps for the Unwary).