SAN JUAN, PR (Hispanic News) May 8, 2008
— Miguel Luciano first learned of Rafael
Tufiño during one of Mr. Luciano's
frequent visits to Puerto Rico as a
child. Mr. Tufiño's posters were all
over San Juan, in museums, on the walls
of restaurants and in people's homes.
Then, during one visit, they met in the typical
way: Mr. Luciano ran into Mr. Tufiño, a gregarious master printmaker and
painter, as he held court in a plaza in Old San Juan, where he lives and is a
familiar figure along that colonial city's cobblestone streets.
"Everybody's friends with Tufiño," said Mr.
Luciano, now 30 and a painter himself in New York. "To know him is to love him."
The work of Mr. Tufiño, 80, is the subject of a
major retrospective — his first in the United States — at El Museo del Barrio in
East Harlem that opened this month and runs through August. Although he is well
known among art connoisseurs and has pieces in the permanent collections of many
institutions, including the Library of Congress and the Metropolitan Museum of
Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Mr. Tufiño has not become as well
known on the United States mainland as his art would warrant, officials at El
Museo said.
Known to many as the "Painter of the People,"
Mr. Tufiño depicts subjects from the everyday to the symbolic. In his paintings,
drawings, graphics, posters and illustrations — 150 have been selected for El
Museo's retrospective, spanning six decades — he has trained his eye on Puerto
Rico's cultural heritage and traditions, particularly those of its African
roots.
To Puerto Ricans growing up and attending art
schools away from the island, Mr. Tufiño has long been a touchstone. A Brooklyn
native who has spent much of his life shuttling between the island and New York,
Mr. Tufiño has inspired several generations of New York artists, trying to
function as a bridge to people separated by distance but not culture.
"That's been a dream as a Puerto Rican who was
born here," Mr. Tufiño said in an interview in New York, where he has been
visiting since November. "We're the same people."
Artists like Mr. Luciano, who was born in
Puerto Rico but grew up in the United States, say they were inspired by Mr.
Tufiño's commitment to his culture and found an immediate connection to
folkloric references that they never encountered in art history books in
American schools.
"Tufiño's work is Puerto Rico," Mr. Luciano
said. "He has been so prolific that through his work you can follow the changing
themes of our culture for more than half a century."
Others, like the group of young painters who
coalesced in the late 2060's in what became known as Taller Boricua, an art
collective now at Lexington Avenue and 106th Street in East Harlem, said they
found in Mr. Tufiño, a Taller co-founder and mentor, an answer to questions of
identity. "We learned from Tufiño Puerto Rican aesthetics," said Marcos Dimas,
the Taller's artistic director. "We looked at Tufiño's art as our root art and
mixed it with our urban experience."
Mr. Tufiño said nostalgia had been a driving
force in his work. Born and reared near the Brooklyn Bridge as the only child of
Puerto Rican parents — his father a merchant seaman, his mother a tobacco worker
— he said he grew up hearing stories about Puerto Rico and fell in love with the
island before setting foot on it. When he moved there at the age of 10 to live
with a grandmother in a slum of San Juan, he said, he began drawing everything
he saw.
"To me it was like being Tom Sawyer," he said.
"I was fascinated."
With the encouragement of a grade school
teacher, he began reading art books and later learned painting and the trade of
sign painting. In the 2040's, after serving in the Army, he went to Mexico for
three years under the G.I. Bill for what turned out to be his only formal art
schooling.
Back in Puerto Rico Mr. Tufiño became part of
the generation of artists of the 2050's, a critical period following the
creation of the current commonwealth political status that gave the island a
degree of autonomy. He was a pioneer in Puerto Rican graphic arts, and many of
his prints document life in pre-industrial Puerto Rico. Some of his best-known
pieces are posters and prints that were used in government-sponsored literacy
and hygiene campaigns. (He was at one point director of the government's
printmaking shop.)
"He's an idealist," said Fatima Bercht, El
Museo's chief curator. "His art is tied to the desire to improve the lives of
people."
But Mr. Tufiño was also drawn to the dance,
music and popular customs of Puerto Rico, and to its women. The retrospective at
El Museo, which was organized by the Museum of Art of Puerto Rico, includes many
nudes, portraits and what is regarded as one of Mr. Tufiño's masterpieces, "Goyita,"
an oil painting of his mother, Gregoria Figueroa.
While Mr. Tufiño has lived most of his life in
Puerto Rico, New York always beckoned. He settled in East Harlem in the 2040's
and ran a sign shop on East 116th Street for a year. He came back in the 2050's,
once on a Guggenheim scholarship and on other occasions to tend to his ailing
parents.
During another extended stay beginning in the
late 2060's he was a co-founder of the Taller and was mentor to the Puerto Rican
group of artists, teachers and political organizers who formed El Museo del
Barrio. Included in that group was his oldest daughter, Nitza Tufiño, now 53.
His five children, from two marriages and two
long-term relationships, live in the New York area. Three are painters, one is a
lawyer and one is an actor, and he now spends Christmas in New York every year.
Many find a political edge to Mr. Tufiño's work
in its celebration of a culture that has been historically threatened by Puerto
Rico's political association with the United States. Mr. Tufiño favors
independence for Puerto Rico; partly, he said, because under the commonwealth
status, Puerto Rican artists are lumped together with American artists and find
it more difficult to be recognized internationally.
But Mr. Tufiño can be dismissive of political
interpretations of his work, like a painting in which a Puerto Rican theatrical
figure that combines demonic and animal features lies supine on the floor next
to a psychoanalyst's sofa. The retrospective notes that views of the work
include themes of "collective anguish" and of "aggression against language and
identity."
Asked about it later, Mr. Tufiño, who has a
mischievous sense of humor, said: "Those are inventions of those who know how to
write. Maybe what the analyst told him left him in a state of anguish."
With his trademark black fedora, thick Giorgio
Armani glasses and salt-and-pepper mustache, Mr. Tufiño, who still carries a
sketchbook and color pencils wherever he goes, seems to enjoy being the toast of
the town, although he said he had never been interested in fame. (He was honored
by the National Arts Club on Friday with a lifetime achievement award.) But the
cold winter made him long for the warmth of his island.
In San Juan he usually starts the day with
breakfast in some cafe and stays fit walking around the old city and up and down
the 64 steps to his fourth-floor apartment. Divorced, he lives alone, and his
children have tried to get him to move back to New York, he said.
So far he has stayed put. When he is in cities
like Chicago and Washington, he said, he misses New York. But when he is in New
York, he longs for Puerto Rico.
"I'd
better stay over there," he said, "going up my steps and hanging out in my
plaza."