Hello Everyone--
Harry Burrus sent this to me thought  to pass on to you--as recently xul solar mentioned on list
and here great opportunity to find these closer to hand--
--think i'll go to see these in the old home of Duke Records (Bobby Blue Bland etc) and international artists label! (13th floor elevators, bubble puppy , red krayola even lightnin hopkins)
Many thanks, Harry!
david-bc

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>I checked his work -- notice the exhibit is coming to Houston!  First show for him is USA.
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>The show in BA:
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>The exhibition, entitled "Xul Solar: Visions and Revelations," opened here in June and will continue through Aug. 15. In September, it will travel to São Paulo and, early next year, to the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston for what will be Xul Solar's first individual show ever in the United States.
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>"When it comes to Latin American art of the 1920's and 1930's, people tend to think of the Mexican muralists and Frida Kahlo and stop there," said Mari Carmen Ramírez, the Houston museum's chief curator of Latin American art. Xul Solar, by contrast, "is not the kind of artist who is easily absorbed into the fine-arts milieu of any country," because he did not conform to a single medium or pattern of _expression_.
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>Recognizing Xul Solar's growing stature, the Houston museum recently acquired three of his works. The most celebrated is "Jefa," a 1923 watercolor of a woman's head, adorned with cat's whiskers and surrounded by arcane symbols, that critics regard as the culmination of an especially fecund period of the artist's 50-year career.
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>Xul Solar's art has usually been viewed as part of the Latin American avant-garde of the early 20th century. But the curator of the Malba show, Patricia Artundo, has chosen to give equal weight to the mystical aspects of his work: the first painting visitors see on entering the gallery is a painting Xul Solar did of his own horoscope in 1953.
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>"His was a spiritual search, but not in a straight line," Dr. Artundo said. "Occult sciences, the Kabbalah, astrology, the I Ching, the tarot, Aleister Crowley, they all flow together along with his vanguard tendencies and play a role in his desire to unify Latin America on a spiritual basis."
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>Critics and art historians often compare Xul Solar to Paul Klee, whose work he saw and admired during the dozen years he spent in Europe before returning in 1924 to Argentina. Like Klee, Xul Solar often included letters, numbers and other symbols in his paintings. The color schemes the two artists adopted was often similar too, as was the underlying spirit of their work and their interest in primitive and archaic art.
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>"There is a lot of kinship in their formal visual language, their refusal to paint in a traditional way and in the almost childlike quality of Xul Solar's work, the way he uses schematic figures like the sun, the moon and snakes," Dr. Ramírez said. "He absorbed German Expressionism and Paul Klee as his starting point, though what he did with them later was very different."
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>In addition to the paintings, the exhibition contains tarot cards painted by Xul Solar, a pair of masks and several objects he invented. These "heirlooms from another cosmos," as he once referred to them, include a harmonium with three rows of colored keys and a board game he called "pan-chess," with 13-by-13 squares (instead of 8-by-8).
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>At a panel discussion here in early July, Jorge Schwartz, a critic and professor of Spanish-American literature at the University of São Paulo, talked of Xul Solar's "desire to make corrections," citing pan-chess and the artist's plan to modify soccer to use up to five balls simultaneously. But he also tried to improve his native tongue by inventing two new languages, Neo-Criollo and Pan-Lengua, that he incorporated into his work.
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>One of his many notebooks, written in Neo-Criollo, is on display as part of the exhibition. Many of the paintings were also given titles in Neo-Criollo, or Neo-Creole, a mixture of Spanish and Portuguese with a smattering of English.
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>The artist's playfulness with language extended even to the pseudonym he adopted while living in Europe, at the suggestion of an Argentine friend and fellow painter who thought his real name too ponderous for an artist. Though based on his birth name, Xul Solar can be interpreted to mean "solar light" or "light from the south."
>Many of the works in the exhibition are on loan from the Xul Solar Museum here, which opened in 1993, one floor below the apartment where the artist lived for most of his adult life. The museum contains the largest collection of his paintings, along with much of his correspondence and manuscripts.
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>"Xul used to say that he painted reality, the reality of his own visions," said Jorge Natalio Povarche, director of the Xul Solar Foundation, which runs the museum, and the artist's dealer during the later stages of his career. "Other painters were easier to read, and that is why so much of his work ended up here. There was no market for him because they didn't understand him."
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>Borges, though, was a frequent visitor to the apartment at 1212 Laprida Street, often arriving for breakfast and then, if conversation had taken wing, returning to his own apartment for lunch with Xul Solar in tow. In the living room of Xul Solar's apartment even now is a pinkish-purple chair that only Borges was allowed to use.
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>Xul Solar was a dozen years older than Borges, and introduced him to some areas of esoteric literature. But those who knew them described their relationship as one of intellectual equals.
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>"It is too bad that videotape and audiotape didn't exist in those days, because recordings of their dialogue could have enriched culture the way that their letters do," Mr. Povarche said. "They talked of everything, and some of their conversations were conducted at such a high level, were so dazzling, that anyone listening in would be left almost in a state of levitation."
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>During Xul Solar's lifetime, few of his works were sold. He did illustrations for some Borges books and for magazines that the writer edited, but earned a living mainly as a translator of books in Italian, German, English and French.
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>As Dr. Artundo noted, "One of the most peculiar things about him is that he had more friends who were writers than artists, and most of them were younger than he." Xul Solar appears as a character or is referred to in several novels and stories, the most notable being Borges's "Tlon, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" and "A Universal History of Infamy."
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>"A man versed in every field of knowledge, curious about everything arcane, father of writings, of languages, of utopias, of mythologies, a guest in hells and heavens," was the way Borges described his friend in an essay he wrote while Xul Solar was still alive. After the artist's death he added: "Predictably, Xul Solar's utopias failed, but that failure is ours, not his. We have not known how to deserve them."
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