Luisa Richter (30 June 1928 â 29 October 2015), born Louise Kaelble, was a German-born Venezuelan painter, printmaker, collage artist, and educator based in Caracas. Trained in Stuttgart under Willi Baumeister (1949âÂÂ1955), she relocated to Caracas in 1955 and developed an abstract practice that included informalist painting, geometric "planar spaces", and an extensive body of collage work. She participated in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum's 1966 exhibition The Emergent Decade: Latin American Painters and Painting in the 1960's and represented Venezuela at the 38th Venice Biennale in 1978, where she exhibited twelve oil paintings and thirty collages. In Venezuela, she received the National Prize of Drawing and Engraving (1967) and the National Prize of Plastic Arts (1981). In 2002 she received the Knight's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, and in 2008 her hometown of Besigheim established the Luisa Richter Prize for visual arts.
Richter was born in Besigheim, Germany, on 30 June 1928. El EstÃÂmulo identifies her parents as Albert Kaelble (an engineer and architect) and Gertrud Unkel. She initially studied at the Freie Kunstschule (Free Art School) in Stuttgart before enrolling at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart, where she worked under Willi Baumeister from 1949 to 1955. A Stuttgarter Nachrichten obituary reported that Richter was present in Baumeister's studio when the artist died in 1955.
In September 1955, Richter married the civil engineer Hans Joachim Richter and in December of the same year the couple moved to Caracas, where her husband worked on large-scale infrastructure projects. Despite settling in Venezuela, she continued to spend significant portions of each year at her parents' home in Besigheim until the 1990s, and her work reflects both European and Latin American influences as a result of this dual residency.
Richter entered Venezuela's art circuits soon after her arrival. In 1958 she began participating in national salons, presenting four monotypes at the XIX Salón Oficial, and the following year she held her first solo exhibition at the Museo de Bellas Artes in Caracas, showing works including JeroglÃÂfico and Gilgamesh.
The Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales biography associates her early Caracas painting with informalism and highlights her series Cortes de Tierra (Earth Cuts), inspired by the rock faces exposed by road construction through the mountains during her first ascent to Caracas from La Guaira. The Stuttgarter Nachrichten noted that the "brutally blasted rock cuttings" that her husband's engineering projects carved into the landscape directly inspired this series, which helped establish her reputation. In the 1960s she began expressive drawings titled Cruces y conexiones (Crosses and Connections) and in 1963 she temporarily returned to figuration.
In 1966 she participated in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum exhibition The Emergent Decade: Latin American Painters and Painting in the 1960's, which presented the work of artists from eight Latin American countries. In 1978 she represented Venezuela at the 38th Venice Biennale; the MNAV biography states that her presentation included twelve oil paintings and thirty collages, while Kunstmuseum Stuttgart describes her "planar spaces" (Flächenräume) as the basis of her international breakthrough.
She continued exhibiting internationally throughout the 1980s and 1990s, with solo shows at venues including the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Caracas (1981), Galerie Ruchti in Cologne (1981), Galerie Roosenhaus in Hamburg (1983, 1985), the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Montevideo (1984), the Centro Cultural San MartÃÂn in Buenos Aires (1985), and the Peter Fischinger Gallery in Stuttgart (1989), among others.
In 2014, the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart devoted a floor of its exhibition space to Richter's work, concurrent with an exhibition of Gego's sculptures and drawings. The presentation, which ran from 29 March to 29 June 2014, focused on her collages supplemented by paintings of the "planar spaces".
Posthumously, Richter's work was included in Contesting Modernity: Informalism in Venezuela, 1955âÂÂ1975, a major exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (28 October 2018 â 21 January 2019) organized by curator Mari Carmen RamÃÂrez in partnership with the Colección Mercantil Arte y Cultura in Caracas. The exhibition, the first to comprehensively study Venezuelan informalism, identified Richter as one of the movement's chief practitioners.
Museum and critical writing on Richter commonly emphasizes her movement between textured abstraction in her early Venezuelan work and later geometric and spatial concerns ("planar spaces"), alongside a sustained commitment to collage as an independent line of work. Kunstmuseum Stuttgart notes that during her stays in Besigheim she produced expressive figurative paintings "in the tradition of Willi Baumeister and Hans Fähnle", while in Caracas, influenced by tropical light, she developed the abstract geometric Flächenräume (planar spaces), whose prismatic three-dimensionality she described as reflecting the complexity of life.
Her collages interlaced drawn and glued-on components to form multi-layered, associative compositions. Kunstmuseum Stuttgart notes that in these works she highlighted the political and social relationships between people and their surroundings.
Art critic Juan Calzadilla, writing in 1969, placed Richter's work within the context of Venezuelan informalism and emphasized the way she confronted what was called "the Action painting problem", noting that despite experimenting with different techniques and styles, she maintained coherence across her body of work. Calzadilla compared her practice to that of Armando Reverón on the basis of its autobiographical nature.
A 1993 essay by critic Ricardo Pau-Llosa (described in the ICAA/MFAH record) analyzes how Richter sought to recover "the essential" in abstract visual languages, including the transformation of informalist concerns (light and texture) into a different conceptual register.
Richter taught at the Instituto de Diseño Neumann (later Fundación Neumann) in Caracas, where she was a colleague of Gego. El EstÃÂmulo describes her as teaching there for 18 years, and El Nacional identifies her as a faculty member and a founder of Prodiseño. The Stuttgarter Nachrichten reported that she held a professorship from 1969 to 1987.
El Nacional also reports that she received an honorary doctorate (Doctorado Honoris Causa) from the Simón BolÃÂvar University in 2010 in recognition of her artistic career.
Richter's work is held in the collections of the GalerÃÂa de Arte Nacional, the Museo de Bellas Artes, and the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Caracas in Caracas; the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart and the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart in Germany; the Museo de Artes Visuales in Montevideo; the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Bogotá; the Museo de Arte Moderno in Rio de Janeiro; and the Museo de la Estampa Latinoamericana in San Juan, among others.
The following is a partial list of awards received by Richter:
Richter died in Caracas on 29 October 2015 at the age of 87. Venezuela's Ministry of Culture announced her death without specifying the cause.