After Eight Years Away, Ibsen Espada’s Solo Show Is Extensive — and Evolutionary

After Eight Years Away, Ibsen Espada’s Solo Show Is Extensive — and Evolutionary

Espada's 'Medruscala,' detail

ABRASIVE SILENCE IS the provocative title of Foltz Fine Art's current exhibition of more than 50 recent paintings by Houston artist Ibsen Espada. The spacious, sunlit gallery resounds with the musicality and rhythms of Espada's artworks, some on canvas, some on rice paper, all of which hang together like a silent symphony of juicy colors and mysterious textures.

Born in New York in 1952, Espada grew up in Puerto Rico. He began creating art under the tutelage of Cuban expat Rolando Lopez Dirube, a deaf man, whose modes of expression included painting, wood carving and printing.


Espada and his family relocated to Houston in 1975, where he studied with Dorothy Hood, another important mentor, and would be selected as one of just three Latino artists for the 1985-1986 exhibition Fresh Paint: The Houston School, hosted by the MFAH. Abrasive Silence includes a separate room works from this era, including a large painting from 1989 titled Frequency, in which Espada's distinctive calligraphic lines and hermetic symbols tumble and twirl like wreckage caught inside a tornado's funnel.

Throughout his career, Espada has experimented with unusual combinations of materials. In his newest works, carborundum, an abrasive powder that can be bonded for use inside a bullet-proof vest, is sprinkled over paint that has been applied to the canvas using such unconventional tools as windshield wipers. The results contain all the energy of a focused meditation, with plenty of layers and space for the willing viewer to let themselves get lost in.

It's been eight years since Espada has had a solo show, which makes Abrasive Silence even more of a cause for celebration, though seeing how his work has continued to evolve is what makes this show so special. Perhaps there is power in embracing silence, and taking time away to work on one's craft?

'Bumeron'

'Gogustra'

Art + Entertainment

David Robertson

AS HOUSTON SLOWLY recovers from last week’s severe derecho, it is strangely serendipitous that on May 25 and 26, a little over a week after that unexpected drama, the Houston Symphony will perform composer John Adams’ critically acclaimed Nativity oratorio El Niño, named after the 1997 meteorological phenomenon and precursor to what we now refer to as “weird weather.”

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

A rendering of Hotel Saint Augustine (courtesy of Lake Flato Architects and Ten Eyck Landscape Architect)

CELEBRATED CHEF Aaron Bludorn is on a roll. After successfully opening three Houston restaurants including the recent Bar Bludorn, he has set his sights on the boutique Hotel Saint Augustine to open this fall.

Keep Reading Show less
Food