|       |       |       |     Hunter College  |  |    | Gerd Leufert and Gego in Tarmas, Venezuela,  1957. Photo courtesy of Cecilia de Torres Gallery, LTD., New  York. |  Gego and Gerd Leufert:October 3–November 22, 2014a dialogue
 Opening  reception: October 2, 7–9pm
 
 The Bertha and  Karl Leubsdorf Art Gallery
 Hunter College
 West  Building
 68th Street & Lexington Avenue
 New York
 
 www.hunter.cuny.edu/art/galleries
 |  |  |        |       |       |    Share |    | Curated by  Geaninne Gutiérrez-Guimarães Organized by Sarah Watson  and Annie Wischmeyer
 
 Gego (Gertrude Goldschmidt,  Venezuelan, born Germany, 1912–1994) and Gerd Leufert (Venezuelan,  born Lithuania, 1914–1998) are among the most significant artists  working with the language of abstraction during the second half of the 20th  century in Venezuela. The exhibition Gego and Gerd Leufert: a  dialogue highlights both artists' development and reciprocal influence  through a focused core of works produced from 1964 to 1990. The exhibition  explores shared motifs in each of these artists' productions, most notably  their use of the line as a means of enhancing the visual potentiality of  empty spaces within two or three-dimensional forms. The partnership between  Gego and Leufert resulted in lifelong mutual support that concurrently  nurtured their personal relationship and their independent careers as  artists. Gego and Gerd Leufert: a dialogue provides a long-overdue,  tandem examination of the artists' works, thereby unveiling an underlying,  parallel dialogue of nonobjective language within their organic forms,  linear structures, and systematic, spatial investigations. Both ultimately  became pioneers in their field, having a long-lasting impact on future  generations of artists at national and international levels.
 
 Gego and Gerd Leufert: a dialogue opens at a pivotal moment  to coincide with the artists' centenary celebration of their births. This  unique timing opens the door for the continuation of critical discussion of  their critical role in modern art history.
 
 Hunter College and  the Hunter College Art Galleries thank the generous sponsors  of Gego and Gerd Leufert: a dialogue, who have made this  exhibition possible. These include Patricia Phelps de Cisneros,  ISLAA (Institute for Studies on Latin American Art), the GPM Fund, Solita  Mishaan, Andrea and José Olympio Pereira, and Sicardi Gallery,  Houston. We are also extremely grateful for  the leadership support of the Hunter College Art  Galleries provided by Carol Goldberg and Agnes Gund,  and by an anonymous donor. Through this, they have been key to  the realization of this unique exhibition.
 
 
 Gego
 Gego was born Gertrude Goldschmidt in Hamburg, Germany,  in 1912, and migrated to Venezuela in 1939, fleeing Nazi Germany. Trained  as an architect at the Technische Hochschule (Technical School) of  Stuttgart, now the Universität Stuttgart, she graduated in 1938 with a  degree in engineering and began her career in Caracas working at several  architectural firms. Gego maintained her practice of painting and drawing,  and in the early 1950s, she abandoned work as an architect to pursue art.  In 1954 she exhibited for the first time in Venezuela at the XV  Salón Oficial Anual de Arte Venezolano (XV Annual Official Salon of  Venezuelan Art) at the Museo de Bellas Artes, Caracas, and earned her first  solo show in 1958. In the following decade, she explored the relationship  between line, space, and volume, following a nonobjective language. She  continued developing her visual vocabulary, working in engraving and  sculpture, fastidiously conducting investigations of spheres and cubes, all  the while conveying a dynamism with her lines that set her apart from her  peers. From 1963 to 1967 Gego focused on refining her printing technique by  attending grant-funded trips to print workshops at the Pratt Institute in  New York and the Tamarind Lithography Workshop in Los Angeles. In 1967 she  was awarded a prize for her lithographs at the XXVIII Salón Oficial  Anual de Arte Venezolano. Gego's work of the late 1960s and 1970s shows her  experimentation with new materials and three-dimensional construction  techniques. In 1979 she was awarded Venezuela's Premio Nacional de Artes  Plásticas, and in 1981, her installation Reticulárea  was permanently installed at the Galería de Arte Nacional, Caracas.  Highly idiosyncratic, Gego's oeuvre was and remains iconic among her  contemporaries, proponents of Venezuelan kinetic art, such as Jesús  Rafael Soto and Alejandro Otero, and post-war Constructivists. Gego passed  away in Caracas in 1994.
 
 Gerd Leufert
 Gerd  Leufert was born in 1914 in Memel, a coastal Lithuanian town later occupied  by Germany. He attended the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Munich in  1939, where he studied graphic design, and became a member of the Werkbund,  an interdisciplinary association founded on the social importance of design  and craftsmanship. He migrated to Caracas, Venezuela, in 1951, and excelled  as a graphic designer. His contribution to the visual arts, graphic design,  and museology is paramount in Venezuela. He was credited with bringing the  rigor of German design principles to the country, and was well regarded for  his work as an art and graphic design teacher in various Caracas  educational institutions. From 1961 to 1973, Leufert worked at the Museo de  Bellas Artes, Caracas, first as a designer, rebranding the museum's visual  identity, and later as the curator of drawings and graphic design. During  his tenure he developed numerous exhibitions and published nearly 300  exhibition catalogues, of which he personally designed two hundred. During  this time he also published celebrated and award-winning books, including  Visibilia (1966), Imposibilia (1968), Nenias (1970),  and Sin Arco (1971), which featured his groundbreaking graphic  design. Upon retirement, from 1974 to 1979, Leufert was part of a group of  four designers who developed La nueva estampilla Venezolana (The new  Venezuelan stamp) series of postage stamps, which were exhibited in  Venezuela and Prague, then Czechoslovakia. Boundless in his invention, he  then focused on creating sculpture in organic materials and on a new  venture into photography. In 1990 he was awarded Venezuela's Premio  Nacional de Artes Plásticas, followed by an exhibition of his  photographs at Sala RG, Caracas, curated by Miguel Arroyo (Venezuelan,  1920–2004).  In the last years of his life, Leufert continued to  exhibit his drawings and photographs at Centro Cultural Consolidado,  Caracas (1992), Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Maracay Mario Abreu  (1992), and Museo de Bellas Artes (1994–95). He passed away in  Caracas in 1998.
 
 
 About the Hunter College Art  Galleries
 The Hunter College Art Galleries, under the auspices of  the Department of Art and Art History, have been a vital aspect of the New  York cultural landscape since their inception over a quarter-century ago.  This exhibition builds on a long tradition of creative interchange between  art history and studio art at Hunter.
 
 Widely regarded as one  of the leading art programs in the country, Hunter College's Department of  Art serves both undergraduate and graduate populations, offering a full  undergraduate major in Art, a BFA and an MFA in Studio Art, and an MA in  Art History. In its 2012 rankings of "America's Best Graduate Schools,"  U.S. News & World Report ranked Hunter's Master of Fine Arts  program 13th in the nation, and within this, the painting and drawing  program seventh.
 
 
 For more information, please visit www.hunter.cuny.edu/art/galleries, call T +1 212 772  4991, or email awischme@hunter.cuny.edu.
 
 
 
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