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Working Through Influence: A Conversation with Artist Angel Otero

March 1, 2018

 

In 1973, literary critic Harold Bloom published The Anxiety of Influence: A Theory of Poetry. His central thesis was that poets are both hindered and encouraged in their creative process by the ambiguous relationship they necessarily maintain with precursor poets. A similarly fraught and productive relationship exists between visual artists and their own forerunners. Painter Angel Otero and critic-curator Christian Viveros-Fauné examine both the anxiety and advantages of influence in a freewheeling conversation that centers on Otero’s relationship with various generations of artists as well as on the Puerto Rican painter’s exhibition “Angel Otero: Elegies,” currently on view at the Bronx Museum of the Arts.

Two people seated in conversation with microphones

March 1, 2018

 

In 1973, literary critic Harold Bloom published The Anxiety of Influence: A Theory of Poetry. His central thesis was that poets are both hindered and encouraged in their creative process by the ambiguous relationship they necessarily maintain with precursor poets. A similarly fraught and productive relationship exists between visual artists and their own forerunners. Painter Angel Otero and critic-curator Christian Viveros-Fauné examine both the anxiety and advantages of influence in a freewheeling conversation that centers on Otero’s relationship with various generations of artists as well as on the Puerto Rican painter’s exhibition “Angel Otero: Elegies,” currently on view at the Bronx Museum of the Arts.