Lucio Muñoz

(Madrid, 1929 – 1998)

Untitled

1969

collage on paper

30,8 x 23,6 cm

Inv. no. 36812

BBVA Collection Spain



The inward looking approach and the liveliness exuded by his works earned Lucio Muñoz an enviable reputation as an artist both in Spain and internationally.

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.

This
on paper, together with the other six in the BBVA Collection, is part of a series of originals dated in 1969-70 that the artist probably made as preparatory models for a portfolio of silkscreen prints in homage to his friend and master, the painter and poet Eduardo Chicharro (1905-1964), one of the major exponents of the movement known as
.

Here, like in the untitled work 36808 from the BBVA Collection, in the lower section of the support Muñoz introduced microwood, an element he systematically used in his graphic work in the 1960s. He used ink and
to outline the elements he wanted to create and to achieve a perfect harmony between drawing and wood.