Eduardo Chillida (1924-2002) - Mano





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Eduardo Chillida. Mano, ink drawing.
Eduardo Chillida is one of the major figures of 20th-century European art. Internationally recognized for his exploration of space, matter, and void, his work spans sculpture, drawing, and printmaking, investigating the tensions between form, balance, and architecture. Throughout his career, his visual language evolved toward a radical synthesis in which minimal gestures acquire powerful structural presence.
Sheet dimensions: 36 x 26 cm.
Drawing dimensions: 13.4 x 9.4 cm (same size as the original drawing).
Total dimensions: 41 x 31 cm.
Limited edition from the Chillida Leku Museum.
Five-ink print on River Artist natural white paper, 120 gr.
Hand-mounted on grey support with three removable points for presentation.
Excellent condition.
In this drawing titled Mano, Chillida reduces the figure to a single continuous line that defines volume through tension rather than detail. The hand, one of the recurring motifs in his graphic work, is treated not as an anatomical study but as a structural form, built through the balance between curve, pressure, and empty space. The irregular contour and the thickness of the ink line reveal the artist’s interest in gesture as a physical act, closely related to his sculptural practice.
The composition reflects one of the essential ideas in Chillida’s work: the void is not absence but an active element that gives meaning to form. The line encloses space while at the same time opening it, creating a dialogue between interior and exterior that can also be found in his iron and steel sculptures. This economy of means, reduced to a single dark line on a warm support, gives the image a strong presence despite its small scale.
The work functions as a synthesis of Chillida’s graphic language, where drawing becomes a field of experimentation for ideas later developed in sculpture. Rather than describing the hand, the artist constructs it, transforming gesture into structure and space into the true subject of the work.
Eduardo Chillida. Mano, ink drawing.
Eduardo Chillida is one of the major figures of 20th-century European art. Internationally recognized for his exploration of space, matter, and void, his work spans sculpture, drawing, and printmaking, investigating the tensions between form, balance, and architecture. Throughout his career, his visual language evolved toward a radical synthesis in which minimal gestures acquire powerful structural presence.
Sheet dimensions: 36 x 26 cm.
Drawing dimensions: 13.4 x 9.4 cm (same size as the original drawing).
Total dimensions: 41 x 31 cm.
Limited edition from the Chillida Leku Museum.
Five-ink print on River Artist natural white paper, 120 gr.
Hand-mounted on grey support with three removable points for presentation.
Excellent condition.
In this drawing titled Mano, Chillida reduces the figure to a single continuous line that defines volume through tension rather than detail. The hand, one of the recurring motifs in his graphic work, is treated not as an anatomical study but as a structural form, built through the balance between curve, pressure, and empty space. The irregular contour and the thickness of the ink line reveal the artist’s interest in gesture as a physical act, closely related to his sculptural practice.
The composition reflects one of the essential ideas in Chillida’s work: the void is not absence but an active element that gives meaning to form. The line encloses space while at the same time opening it, creating a dialogue between interior and exterior that can also be found in his iron and steel sculptures. This economy of means, reduced to a single dark line on a warm support, gives the image a strong presence despite its small scale.
The work functions as a synthesis of Chillida’s graphic language, where drawing becomes a field of experimentation for ideas later developed in sculpture. Rather than describing the hand, the artist constructs it, transforming gesture into structure and space into the true subject of the work.

