“Poetics of Exactness” is not an exhibition exclusively (or only) dedicated to works of geometric abstraction and the sober and precise beauty that characterizes them. It is, rather, an attempt to explore that exact moment in which a gesture, no matter how discrete –and precisely because of it–, starts to elicit effects in its beholders that are not those that govern our relationship with the objects we usually surround us with (feelings of intellectual curiosity with an almost metaphysical perplexity, and also of an unexplainable beauty) and which characterize a fair share of the art production of our times. It is an exhibit where we aim to ask what it is that makes an object –at times, generated through elemental craftsmanship; others, through techniques and materials that characterize the industry of our times– reveal itself as capable of eliciting in us that special emotion, that emotional turmoil, of sorts, that characterizes the poetic.
Nothing may, however, seem further from beauty and poetry than the exact, that which has been the product of a calculation. But the functions of art include connecting the present (with all that is gratifying, and all that is menacing) with our deepest mental needs to, in a way, exorcize it, make it docile for human life. It was, then, inevitable for the most powerful forces of our time –technique, industry and its hallmark product: the machine– to be imbued into it, appropriating their processes, their techniques, their materials, to produce the exact beauty of the geometric, the concrete, the conceptual, the minimalistic with them –something that is prevalent in many of the works found in the JCMAC.
“Poetics of Exactness” therefore aims to make us face that beauty of what has been intentionally produced; devised, calculated to please the eye and its governing body: the human brain.
Ariel Jimenez, Curator