Antonio Berni
- Born:
- May 14, 1905, Rosario, Arg.
- Died:
- Oct. 13, 1981, Buenos Aires (aged 76)
- Notable Works:
- “Juanito Laguna Goes to the City”
- Movement / Style:
- Social Realism
Antonio Berni (born May 14, 1905, Rosario, Arg.—died Oct. 13, 1981, Buenos Aires) was an Argentine artist known for his socially committed art.
Berni had his first exhibition when still a teenager and received a scholarship to study painting in Europe in 1925. After visiting Madrid he settled in Paris, where he studied with the painters André Lhote and Othon Friesz. He received a second scholarship in 1927 that enabled him to come into contact with the Surrealists. While in France he explored Surrealism, revolutionary politics, and the psychoanalytical writings of Sigmund Freud. He began to produce paintings and collages that reflected the influence of Surrealism and of Giorgio de Chirico in particular. The Nap and Its Dream (1932), for example, is a cryptic image in which a shuttered villa and an empty car overlook the sea, from which an enormous industrial tower and a fancifully shaped stone structure emerge.
Berni returned to Argentina in 1930. In 1933 he established a leftist group called Nuevo Realismo (“New Realism”) and began to prefer Social Realism. That same year he collaborated on a mural with visiting Mexican painter David Alfaro Siqueiros. Unlike the muralists of Mexico, however, Berni had little opportunity to paint murals, so instead he used enormous mural-sized canvases. An example of this is Public Demonstration (1934), which captures the desperation of Argentina’s working classes. The anguished faces of men, women, and a child crowd the image; one protester holds a sign that reads “pan y trabajo” (“bread and work”).
Berni continued to produce work in this realist style until the late 1950s, when he began a series of collages that he centred on the daily life of a fictional boy from the slums of Buenos Aires whom he named Juanito Laguna. Juanito Laguna Goes to the City (1963) shows the boy in his best clothes, a sack on his back as he climbs through the refuse that fills the slum. In this work and others, Berni included objects and materials that he collected in the slums themselves—bits of paper, cardboard, newspaper, fabric, and metal. In the early 1960s the fictional prostitute and seamstress Ramona Montiel became the subject of a second series of works. He also produced a number of prints centred on these characters.