Suggestions

Suggestions

Javier Egiluz presents ‘Geografía Latente’ (Latent Geography) in the Sugerencias space at the Gustavo de Maeztu Museum
The Gustavo de Maeztu Museum presents an exhibition by artist Javier Egiluz in the ‘Sugerencias’ exhibition space

The artist Javier Egiluz opens the exhibition ‘Geografía Latente’ in the ‘Sugerencias’ space at the Gustavo de Maeztu Museum, a project that invites the viewer to explore interior and emotional landscapes through painting that oscillates between lyrical abstraction and the evocation of territory.
In ‘Latent Geography’, Egiluz unfolds layers of landscape, approaches, distances and textures to make the invisible visible. His works do not represent specific places, but rather atmospheres that refer to memories and sensations.
In his works, created using mixed media on canvas, he plays with the tension between definition and suggestion, with some pieces evoking mountains, forests or vanishing lines. In this visual exercise, the exhibition becomes an intimate geography, a sensory territory to be discovered.
Egiluz’s work is characterised by a profound reflection on landscape as a metaphor for existence. The artist proposes a sensory and symbolic journey where colour, texture and emptiness act as traces of time.

The term “latent” refers to that which remains hidden, vibrating beneath the surface. In this sense, the artist’s pieces are presented as emotional maps, where the pictorial gesture becomes a form of inner guidance.
Egiluz’s work is characterised by a profound reflection on landscape as a metaphor for existence. The artist proposes a sensory and symbolic journey where colour, texture and emptiness act as traces of time and human experience.
Far from describing recognisable places, his canvases trace territories of perception: possible geographies where the viewer’s gaze completes the meaning of the work.
The ‘Suggestions’ space at the Gustavo de Maeztu Museum is conceived as an area to give visibility to contemporary creators whose work dialogues with the plastic and conceptual sensibility of our time. On this occasion, the museum is hosting Egiluz’s proposal, which expands the boundaries between landscape, abstraction and personal experience.
Admission to the museum is free and it can be visited from Tuesday to Saturday, from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.; Sundays and public holidays, from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

 

 

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