Pierre Cabanne, January 1991
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Genovés' paintings don't describe precise scenes but are like abstract or even unnameable snapshots of violent life. They are flashes that are pleasing to the eye, not only because of the brutal contrasts between the shadow and the light that are accentuated by the unusual cinematographic setting, which recalls an atmosphere of that archaeology of panic. In 1969 Stuart cooper made the film "A test of violence" using scenes of aggression and repression taken from Genovés' paintings.
These paintings are like theatres of memory. The painter experienced, first hand, as a child the sudden irruptions of the "forces of order" caused by sudden flights. He saw towns bombed and deserted, cultures destroyed. The violence of the fascist dictatorship has crushed what was familiar and day-to-day. Anonymous places exist where silence reigns and only shadows remain. Deathly silence.
In some paintings and gouaches the sand has been replaced by ash. The ruins evoke an ancient topography as if seen from an aeroplane. Will man come back? Is he hidden away where we can't see him? In his hideaway, washed by light, the traces of the shadows get longer. There are other signs of flight…it could be said of the Spanish paintings that sometimes the light of the background and the paler colours are absorbed by the darkness of the painting in the night.
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The painter has works in many important museums in New York, Barcelona, Madrid and Cuenca. He has exhibited many times both in groups and individually in the Paris Museum of Modern Art. He has been invited to biennials in Venice and in Sao Paolo. In France he took part in the Paris biennial in 1961; in the exhibition "The Figurative Narrative in Contemporary Art" in 1965; in "Living Art 1965 -1968" in the Maeght Foundation and in the Menton biennial in 1975.
Through Genovés' later works we can see that his painting speaks directly to man. It denounces the aggressions he suffers. Man is never alone but always caught up in a collective storm of helplessness and anguish. His language has resonances of the tragic backdrop of "España negra" (dark Spain), of its liberation and its fatality. His work has a visionary presence to it that is not only modern it is perennial.

