Claudio BRAVO

Mystic Package

Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

Medium Chalk, conte crayon and pastel

Dimension 75 x 110 cm (29¹/₂ x 43¹/₄ inches)

This very large pastel, drawn in 1967, can be grouped with a number of paintings, watercolours and pastels of wrapped packages, suggestive of canvases, loosely covered with paper and tied with string, that are among Claudio Bravo’s most compelling works. In particular, the present sheet is very similar to a large pastel White Package of the same year, in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Other significant, large-scale pastels of the same motif from this period include Brown Package of 1967 in the Museo de Arte de Ponce in Puerto Rico, and the vertical Package of 1969 in the Baltimore Museum of Art. In Bravo’s first solo exhibition in New York, held at the Staempfli Gallery in December 1970, package paintings made up the majority of the twenty-two works on view.

As the artist later recalled of the genesis of the package paintings, ‘I suppose that the idea for these pictures came partly through looking at Mark Rothko’s paintings of large fields of color and partly through certain works that Antoni Tàpies had done using string across a canvas surface. The initial stimulus, however, was a very simple mundane one. Three of my sisters had come to stay with me from Chile. One day one of them came home with a number of packages and placed them on a table. I was fascinated by their forms and I painted them. I went on painting wrapped packages in many different ways, investigating the abstract possibilities of the forms while still creating recognizable objects.’ In another interview, Bravo recognized the enigmatic nature of these works, but added that ‘Yes, there’s some mystery in the wrapped packages, but what I really wanted to paint was the wrapping. I wanted to give a sense of trompe l’oeil tactility.’

In their simplicity and directness, Bravo’s wrapped packages of the late 1960s reflect the particular influence of the work of the Spanish Baroque painter Francisco de Zurbarán. As Bravo himself has acknowledged, ‘I use light a bit like Zurbarán did. He was one of the few painters that gave true transcendent meanings to objects. This treatment…makes things seem more than they are…their essence is greater.’ Soon after his move from Madrid to Tangier in 1972, Bravo decided to give up painting packages. One of his final paintings on this theme, dated 1972 and depicting a very similar wrapped white package to that seen here, is in a private collection in Chile. More than thirty years later, however, the artist returned briefly to the motif of wrapped packages, in several paintings executed in 2003 and 2004.

As the curator Sam Trower has noted, ‘There is something mysterious about all of Claudio Bravo’s art, but the package paintings are particularly compelling. An unknown object wrapped with beautifully folded and crumpled paper fills the entire surface of the painting…As with all great art, there is in these paintings something more, something intangible, almost spiritual, something as affecting as it is memorable. They are more than just beautiful paintings; their presence is overwhelming. In an art world where the art of painting oftentimes seems all but forgotten, the sheer sensuous beauty of Claudio Bravo’s wrapped packages reminds us of the pure pleasures of painting.’

Mystic Package was one of eighteen paintings and pastels of this distinctive subject shown in the exhibition Claudio Bravo: Wrapped Packages, held at the Bass Museum of Art in Miami Beach in 1997-1998. More recently, the present work was included in the exhibition Color into Line: Pastels from the Renaissance to the Present, held at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco in 2021-2022.


Medium: Chalk, conte crayon and pastel

Signature: Signed CLAUDIO BRAVO in red chalk at the lower left and dated MCMLXVII in red chalk at the lower right.

Dimension: 75 x 110 cm (29¹/₂ x 43¹/₄ inches)

Provenance: Alamillo Limited Collection, in 1997
Anonymous sale, New York, Sotheby’s, 27 May 2003, lot 11
Private collection, San Francisco.

Literature: Furio Rinaldi, Color into Line: Pastels from the Renaissance to the Present, exhibition catalogue, San Francisco, 2021-2022, no.72, illustrated pp.104-105.

Exhibition: Miami Beach, Bass Museum of Art, Claudio Bravo: Wrapped Packages, 1997-1998, no.6; San Francisco, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Legion of Honor, Color into Line: Pastels from the Renaissance to the Present, 2021-2022, no.72.

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Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

Old Master, 19th Century and Modern Drawings, Watercolours and Oil Sketches

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