Lucio Muñoz

(Madrid, 1929 – 1998)

LUM 4

1980

print (etching, aquatint, embossing) on paper

75.6 x 56.3 cm

Inv. no. 30137

BBVA Collection Spain



Lucio Muñoz is one of the few artists of his generation who lent particular attention to printing techniques. In fact, he sometimes used them as models for his paintings, while other times he transferred to paper an idea already rendered on canvas or board. In either case, his experimentation with printmaking was a kind of transcendental need, as the artist admitted to Miguel Logroño: “personally I find that printmaking cleanses me and rewards me. Over the last few years, my evolution in painting has been greatly indebted to printmaking (…)”.

Although in his early phase his profound admiration for the Swiss master Paul Klee (1879-1940) drew him towards
, after enrolling at the San Fernando School of Fine Arts in Madrid he came into contact with the major exponents of the Madrid school of realism, most notably Antonio López (1936), Carmen Laffón (1934), Julio López Hernández (1930) and Amalia Avia (1930-2011), whom Muñoz married in 1960. Apart from a close friendship, he shared with all of them a liking for everyday scenes as a means of commenting on the passing of time.

When he moved to Paris with a scholarship from the French government he was able to further his training and get in touch with the
movement which he quickly embraced and then introduced in Spain precisely at the moment when the El Paso group was being created. In the 1950s, while still in Paris, he introduced wood as a vehicle for his expression, working it in very different forms and textures.In the seventies, he experimented on paper with sketches and notes which he then transferred to painting. This coincided with a period of change in which, as the artist explained to María José Salazar in 2001, “the inner landscape gave way to a more problematic, debatable and baroque phase. Now the erstwhile conceptual pretention is joined by a more concrete one, to act with similar methods, but on invented objects (…)”.

From the eighties onwards he dedicated his practice almost exclusively to printmaking. This work is part of the series LUM, made in 1980. Published by Polígrafa, it comprises five
and aquatintprints. For LUM 4 he used six inks, and to add relief he used
, a technique he was very fond of, which gives the oval composition a dynamic magical feel.