







9
Sandú Darié
Untitled
Full-Cataloguing
In this sculpture, Darie combines his painstaking interest in space, light, and color and invites the viewer to take part in the modification of the compositional elements: when one component is lifted or moved another strikingly bold arrangement is revealed. The work transforms into at least seven different forms, ridding any possibility of passive observation. Instead, his invitation for the viewer to participate in the motion, perspective, and movement of the work reinforces Darie’s conviction of art’s social function—a cunning response and counter to the view that abstract art was alien to social reality. In this way, Darie’s Untitled undoubtedly illustrates and defines the theoretical scope and artistic originality of the twentieth century Latin American avant-garde that defined geometric and Concrete abstraction.
Sandú Darié
Romanian / Cuban | B. 1906 D. 1991Romanian-born artist Sandú Daríe was initially trained as a lawyer, but his exposure to the Romanian intelligentsia resulted in his choice of a painting career. After studies in Paris, Darié moved permanently to Havana in 1941. His works evince the basic tenets of Concrete art, a combination of planes, primary colors and form fused with geometric rigor stimulated by Piet Mondrian's Neoplasticism.
His most innovative works include irregular-shaped canvases and structures with moving parts, connoting the principles of the Latin American MADÍ movement that wished to break from traditional painting and focus on the concrete and physical reality of art. Daríe was constantly preoccupied with space, light and color as well as with viewer participation in the motion, perspective and movement of his works.