Manuel Mendive
76.2 x 101.6 cm
In Oggun The Warrior (Oggun, Guerrero), Manuel Mendive captures the essence of the Yoruba orisha Ogún—deity of iron, war, labor, and the forge—through a mesmerizing veil of abstraction that defines his pivotal early 1990s period. Created during a time when Mendive's style evolved toward ethereal, dreamlike compositions, this oil on canvas immerses the viewer in a swirling cosmos of fluid forms and subtle energies, blending Afro-Cuban spirituality with surreal introspection.
The composition unfolds in dominant hues of deep blues and shadowy grays, evoking an underwater or celestial realm where boundaries dissolve. Organic, interweaving shapes dominate: sinuous tendrils and bulbous forms suggest metamorphosing figures—perhaps the warrior himself emerging from chaos, his presence implied through hammer-like protrusions, jagged edges reminiscent of teeth or blades, and dotted red accents that pulse like embers from a forge.
This work exemplifies Mendive's shift in the early 1990s from densely figurative narratives to more intuitive, abstract expressions, influenced by his 1990 exhibition at the Padua Civic Museum and his ongoing exploration of Yoruba mythology. Here, Ogún is not a literal hero but a dynamic force of creation and destruction, rendered in a style that invites contemplation of transformation and interconnectedness.
Provenance
Mendive Studio > Private Collector Miami > Cernuda ArteExhibitions
"Things That Cannot Be Seen Any Other Way: The Art of Manuel Mendive,"California African American Museum, Los Angeles, CA, April 26–October 20, 2013.
"Things That Cannot Be Seen Any Other Way: The Art of Manuel Mendive," The Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, Florida International University, Miami, FL, November 16, 2013–January 26, 2014.
Literature
“Things That Cannot Be Seen Any Other Way: The Art of Manuel Mendive, The Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, Florida International University, Miami, FL, 2013.
Important Cuban Artworks Vol.5 2004 Cernuda Arte