The famous 'abortion' prints by Paula Rego on display at the New York Armory Show

As famosas gravuras de 'aborto' de Paula Rego expostas na Armory Show de Nova York | P55 Magazine | p55-art-auctions
The legal, economic, and moral consequences of the United States Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade are still unfolding. Due to this event, artists and galleries took action, mobilizing to support abortion providers. The trend seems to continue at the Armory Show, which will include among its offerings a set of works from the celebrated series of Paula Rego on access to abortion.

Opening on September 9 at the Javits Center, the fair has partnered with London's Cristea Roberts Gallery to display Rego's “abortion prints” at Crystal Palace – the front entrance – during the fair. Proceeds from sales of the series' two most recent prints will be donated to Abortion on Demand, a provider of telemedicine abortion care. Donations will be made in the name of the late artist. “Rego's work addresses obscure and complex subjects,Paula Rego I wanted to make the viewer stop and get restless, but abortion is never explicit. Only the blood is shown,” Sophie Lindo, associate director of Cristea Roberts Gallery, told ARTnews . The gallery is the world's representative of original prints byPaula Rego

Paula Rego | Magazine | P55.ART

Paula Rego, who died in June at age 87, forced the world to face its failures. In 1998, he began a series of abortion photos inspired by the narrow defeat of a referendum to legalize abortion in Portugal. The Portuguese artist drew young women in mental and physical anguish from illegal procedures. Some of the women represented are still in school uniforms; many look boldly at the viewer.Paula Rego spoke openly of her own abortion, determined to normalize this taboo. The best-known pieces in the series are his monumental pastels, which have been shown around the world, most recently in a major retrospective at Tate Britain in London. Engravings have the same disconcerting power. They were exhibited at the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon in 1999, and appeared frequently in Portuguese newspapers before the success of the second abortion referendum in 2007. The ten prints that arrive at the Armory Show feature women in domestic settings. Though their bodies and faces are contorted in pain, they remain defiant. In untitled 7 (1999), a stone-faced woman is sitting on a bed with her legs spread by two folding chairs. His fists grip the sheets, perhaps anticipating what's to come. A macabre narrative is implied, but the audience must fill in the details, extracting clues from the solitary composition and strained scratches of Rego's needle.

Paula Rego | Magazine | P55.ART

Paula Rego was born in Lisbon in 1926 during the dictatorship of António de Oliveira Salazar, an especially oppressive regime for women – where they did not obtain the right to vote until 1976.Paula Rego She left for England at the age of 20, where she lived most of her life, but her art remained concerned with the situation of women in Portugal. A predominantly Catholic country, had strict restrictions on abortion: the procedure could only be performed if the pregnancy was a danger to the mother's life, the fetus was unviable or the pregnancy was the result of rape. “[Abortion restriction] has affected the poor disproportionately,” he said.Paula Rego to guardian in 2019. “If you were rich, it was easier to find a safe way to get an abortion, usually by traveling to another country. Poor women were massacred.” Throughout his 70-year career,Paula Rego worked in printmaking, installation, pastels and painting, with a consistent focus on women's relationships with systems of power and control. It was notably an outspoken critique of the wave of restrictive abortion legislation in the US ahead of the 2020 presidential election – a precursor to the overthrow of Roe V. Wade. In many cases, these laws allow zero exceptions for abortion. “It seems unbelievable that these battles have to be fought again. It's grotesque," he said.Paula Rego to the British newspaper. “I'm doing what I can with my work, but both men and women have to face it. This affects men too. Women don't get pregnant alone, do they?”

Paula Rego | Magazine | P55.ART


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