Claudio Bravo (painter)
Claudio Bravo | |
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Born |
November 8, 1936 Valparaiso, Chile |
Died |
June 4, 2011 Taroudannt, Morocco |
Education | Colegio San Ignacio (Santiago de Chile) and Miguel Venegas Cifuentes' studio |
Known for | Painting |
Movement | Hyperrealism |
Awards |
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Claudio Bravo (November 8, 1936 – June 4, 2011) was a Chilean hyperrealist painter. He was greatly influenced by Renaissance and Baroque artists, as well as Surrealist painters such as Salvador Dalí. He lived and worked in Tangier, Morocco, beginning in 1972. Bravo also lived in Chile, New York and Spain. He was known mainly for his paintings of still lifes, portraits and packages, but he had also done drawings, lithographs, engraving and figural bronze sculptures. Bravo painted many prominent figures in society, including dictator Franco of Spain, President Ferdinand Marcos and First Lady Imelda Marcos of the Philippines and Malcolm Forbes.
Early Life and Education in Chile
Bravo was born in Valparaíso, Chile, to Tomás Bravo Santibáñez and Laura Camus Gómez. His father was a successful businessman who also owned a ranch, and his mother was a housewife. They had seven children: María Inés, Claudio Bravo, Patricia, Ana María, José Tomás, Hernán, and Ximena. One of his earliest childhood memories was being put on a horse at the age of three. [1]
In 1945, he left the family ranch to join the Colegio San Ignacio in Santiago, Chile, where he excelled in choir, literature and music. In order to raise his grades in math, physics or chemistry, he would give his teacher a portrait. The prefect, Father Dussuel, noticed his self-taught artistic ability and paid for him to study art in the studio of Miguel Venegas Cifuentes in Santiago. Eventually, Bravo's father granted him permission to take the classes and took over the responsibility of paying for them. Bravo studied under Venegas from the age of 11 to 20 and it was the only formal art training he ever received.[1] Bravo’s developing hyperrealist style was encouraged by Venegas who was known for being a strong supporter of the realist movement in Chile. Chile has a strong tie to European arts and did not experience a large modernist movement that other Latin American countries did.[2]
In 1954, he had his first exhibition at "Salón 13" in Santiago at the age of 17. It consisted of mostly oil paintings with some red chalk drawings. The exhibit received good reviews and was considered a great success. All the works were sold, although they went to family and friends.[3] He became very involved in the cultural scene of Santiago and was influenced by people such as Luis Oyarzun, a poet and philosopher. Bravo and Oyarzun hitchhiked together throughout Chile with Oyarzun acting as a teacher of philosophy, art, and life. Benjamín Subercaseaux was another friend who encouraged Bravo to expand his knowledge through reading. In 1955, he danced professionally with the Compañía de Ballet de Chile and worked for Teatro de Ensayo of the Universidad Católica de Chile and had his second exhibition at "Salón 13".[1]
Madrid, Spain
Portraiture
At 21, Bravo began doing portraits in Concepción, Chile, and quickly gained many commissions. He saved his earnings and bought a ticket aboard the Amerigo Vespucci to sail to Paris. The trip, however, was very stormy and Bravo got off at Barcelona and made his way to Madrid where he stayed. Bravo established himself in Madrid in the 1960s as a society portraitist, gaining recognition for his astounding ability to create verisimilitude. His ability to depict complex objects and shapes is reminiscent of Velázquez. There was even a dress designer, Balenciaga, whose dresses had a Renaissance quality to them. Bravo made women of nobility purchase one of Balenciaga's works before he agreed to do their portrait. A year and two months after his arrival, he was already painting Francisco Franco's daughter.[1]
His interest in Renaissance and Baroque works came from his many visits to the Museo del Prado in Madrid where he admired paintings done by old Spanish and Italian masters. Specifically he was inspired by Diego Velázquez for his light effects, Francisco de Zurbarán’s cloth studies, Juan Sánchez Cotán’s still lifes, Juan van der Hamen who popularized still life painting in Madrid, and Luis de Meléndez who had great technical skill in using light to depict texture.[2]
In 1968, Bravo received an invitation from President Marcos of the Philippines to come and paint him and his wife, Imelda Marcos, as well as members of the high society. He spent six months there doing portraits and traveling. Bravo found that the quality of light there was more intense than in Spain or Chile and it transformed how he painted while there. He held an exhibit at the Luz Gallery in Manila where he displayed over 50 works.[3]
Package Paintings
With Spain under Franco’s rule, most art was constrained to his ultra right-wing policies. Bravo’s portraits appealed to the conservative public, but he became frustrated with the lack of intellectual values concerning art. His art shifted one day when his three visiting sisters brought home some packages and left them on the table. He was fascinated by their forms and the texture of the paper they were wrapped with. Bravo’s first exhibit in Spain, at the Galería Fortuny in 1963, had all types of paintings, including these new package ones.[2]
White and Yellow Package, painted in 2005, is a good example of Bravo's continuation of the parcel series. One of the first things to catch the eye is his use of trompe l'oeil, a technique from the Baroque period meaning "to deceive the eye", used to create the illusion of three-dimensionality. This painting style is similar to his approach to still lifes and helps to emphasize the tactile qualities of the paper. The way the package fills the frame elevates its status in a similar manner to what Pop art was doing in the 60s when he began. It also abstracts the package, almost breaking it into clean color blocks, if it weren’t for the string keeping it contained. This abstraction is similar to Rothko’s paintings that employ fields of color and encourage almost a meditative state.
While similar to modern movements, White and Yellow Package also mimics the old masters and their use of draping cloth. Bravo's use of light is similar to that of Caravaggio, a Baroque painter who used a dramatic lighting style called tenebrism to highlight a climatic moment and to bring attention to the front plane by concealing the background in darkness. Many of Caravaggio's works were spiritual and Bravo's Catholic upbringing left him with interest in themes of ritual, mystery, spirituality, death, and the idea of saints. This connection is made obvious through the title of one of his pieces, Homage to St. Theresa, also oil on canvas painted in 1969. A subtle reference to commercialism lingers in the simple fact that it is a parcel, but the mystery of what the paper conceals seems to be more important. The package is teasing the viewer by slowly opening up and while the internal structure is hinted at, it will never be revealed. In this painting, the act of teasing also becomes sexual, reinforced by the color scheme that resembles an egg - a symbol for rebirth and fertility. Overall, White and Yellow Package showcases his ability as a painter and is a mix of contemporary imagery done with traditional values.
New York
In 1969, Bravo met Melvin Blake and Frank Purnell who were in Spain collecting art – especially figure and surrealist pieces. They encouraged him to move to the United States and helped him get connected to the art scene. He moved into an apartment in the East Side of Manhattan.[4] In 1970, Bravo had his first exhibition at the Staempfli Gallery in New York, receiving rave reviews from renowned New York Times art critic John Canaday. Years later, when Bravo's work reflected the hippie movement, Canaday would refer to Bravo's work as "cheap and vulgar".
Morocco
Bravo's relationship with the New York art scene stayed strong, but he began to feel the gray cement and urban setting affecting his work. That, paired with the active social demands in both New York and Spain, caused him to start looking for a new place where he could dedicate more of his time to painting.[4] Not wanting to cut himself off completely from his friends in Madrid, Bravo decided to spend some time in Morocco. The fact that was a completely different place in almost every aspect of life (religion, language, clothing, etc.) was intriguing to him.[5] Bravo moved to Tangier in 1972, where he purchased a 19th-century three-story mansion. He had many of the walls removed, and the remaining walls were painted white to encourage the Mediterranean light so present in his paintings.
He hadn't intended on staying in Morocco, but it was there that he found the colors and light he had been searching for. Bravo considered what he was able to paint "...symphonies of color." Morocco quickly became the place that he considered to be home and with his gardens and view, Bravo rarely needed to leave his house. However, in an attempt to reconnect with the Moroccan world around him, he bought a second home in Marrakech that became his winter residence. Later, Bravo purchased a third home in Taroudannt.[4] Though Bravo's style is hyper-realistic in nature, he rejected the assumption that he based his work on photographic imagery. Instead, Bravo had a daily ritual of painting that began with a walk in the garden and ended after he spent hours in his studio painting a present subject. He took his dedication to painting very seriously and tried to paint every day.[6]
Still lifes, packages and figurative paintings make up the majority of these works created in Morocco. While these all have connections to his previous work, they became infused with Moroccan culture. His use of Surrealism becomes more prominent as well, noticeable in his juxtaposition of objects, dreamlike compositions and ethereal backgrounds.[1] Bravo became interested in the spiritual aspects of the Islamic culture that had a sense of religious intensity that matched his preoccupation with mystery and spirituality. Many view his works as being a hybrid of multiple religions and styles - traditional techniques with contemporary sensibilities, Biblical saints displaced in a Moroccan world, and exotic objects next to common Western imagery. This is supported by the fact that despite his interest in his surroundings, Bravo rejected the label of Orientalist because he did not consider himself to be a part of any particular culture but rather a man interested in many. Though he was fascinated by the Arab world around him, his use of exotic objects and imagery was not done as an attempt to merge his work with the culture.[4]
Death and legacy
The artist died at his home in Taroudannt, Morocco, on June 4, 2011, due to an epilepsy attack.
The Baltimore Museum of Art, El Museo del Barrio (New York City), the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Santiago, Chile), Museo Rufino Tamayo (Mexico City), Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (Rotterdam, The Netherlands), the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Museum of Modern Art (New York City), Museum Ludwig (Cologne, Germany), the Palmer Museum of Art (Pennsylvania State University), and the Philadelphia Museum of Art are among the public collections holding works by Claudio Bravo. [7][8]
Personal life
Bravo was celibate for the last 2 decades of his life, in an interview for El Mercurio he stated, “That (romantic love) was very complicated for me...I’m too passionate and jealous. I decided that my paintings and my animals were my best sources of love. I don’t think I’ve had anyone in my bed since I was 50. I got tired of it.” [9]
Bravo was assisted by Bashir Tabchich who was first hired as chauffeur but later relocated to Bravo's residence with his wife and children and worked as Bravo's assistant since 1979. Tabchich currently permits tours at Bravo's Taroudannt Palace, "Agwidr Claudio Bravo Camus."[10]
Exhibitions
Solo Exhibitions
- 1954 - Salón 13, Santiango, Chile
- 1955 - Salón 13, Santiago, Chile
- 1961 - Universidad de Concepción Chile
- 1963 - Galería Fortuny, Madrid, Spain
- 1965 - Galería Edurne, Madrid Spain (through 1966)
- 1967 - Galería Fortuny, Madrid Spain
- 1968 - Luz Gallery, Manila, Philippines
- 1970 - Staempfli Gallery, New York, New York
- 1971 - Galería Egam, Madrid, Spain
- 1972 - Staempfli Gallery, New York, New York
- 1974 - Galería Vandrés, Madrid, Spain
- Staempfli Gallery, New York, New York
- 1976 - Galerie Claude Berndard, Paris, France
- 1978 - Staempfli Gallery, New York, New York
- 1980 - FIAC (Foire Internationale d’Art Contemporain), Grand Palais, Paris, France
- 1981 - Galerie Levy, Hamburg, Germany
- Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1982 - Museo de Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico
- 1983 - ARCO, Madrid, Spain
- Marlborough Fine Arts, London, Great Britain
- 1984 - Galería Quintana, Bogota, Colombia
- Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1985 - Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1987 - Marlborough Fine Art, Tokyo, Japan (through 1988)
- Elvehjem Museum of Art University of Wisconsin, Madison;
- then to Meadows Museum, Southern Methodist University, Dallas Texas,
- then Duke University Museum of Art, Durham, North Carolina
- 1989 - Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1991 - Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1992 - FIAC Grand Palais Paris, France
- 1993 - Carlsten Art Gallery, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin
- Museo del Grabado Español Contemporaneo, Granada, Spain (through 1994)
- 1994 - Museo Nacional de Bellas Arte, Santiago Chile
- 1995 - Galeía Marlborough, Madrid, Spain
- 1997 - Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, Florida
- 1998 - Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1999 - Marlborough Gallery, Madrid, Spain
- 2000 - Marlborough Gallery, Boca Raton, Florida
- Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 2001 - Marlborough Monaco, Monaco
- 2003 - Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York [7]
Group Exhibitions
- 1971 - Art of Dream, La Jolla Museum of Art, La Jolla, California
- 1972 - Documenta 5, Kassel, Germany
- Humor, Satire and Irony, Art Center, The New School for Social Research, New York, New York
- Sharp Focus Realism, Sidney Janis Gallery, New York, New York
- La Paloma, Galería Vandrés, Madrid, Spain
- 1973 - Artes hyper-realistes, Galerie des Quatre Mouvements, Paris, France
- Hyper-realisme: maîtres américains et européens, Galerie Isy Brachot, Brussels, Belgium
- Contemporary Sapnish Realits, Marlborough Fine Art London, Great Britain
- Réalisme Relativiste, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Belgium
- Tropic of Cancer – Tropic of Capricon: Contemporary Latin American Art, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts
- Super Realist Vision, De Cordoba Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts
- Jovenes en torno a la figuración, Torre del Merino IV Exposicíon de Arte Actual, Santillana del Mar, Madrid, Spain
- 1974 - Ars 1974: Alternatives of Realism, The Fine Arts Academy of Finland, Helsinki, Finland
- Drawings, Nancy Hoffman Gallery, New York, New York
- Kijken naar de werkelijkheid Amerikaanse Hyperrealisten-Europese realisten, Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
- 1976 - Modern Portraits - The Self and Others, Wildenstein & Co., New York, New York
- Aspects of Realism, traveled through 30 Canadian museums til 1978
- 1977 - Illusion and Reality, traveled through Australian museums til 1978
- 1979 - Figurative/Realist Art, Marlborough Gallery (a concurrent exhibition with Brooke Alexander Gallery, Terry Dintenfass, Fisbach, Alan
- Frumkin, and Kornblee Galleries, New York, New York)
- 1980 - Realism and Latin American Painting: The Seventies, Center for Inter-American Relations, New York, and Museo de
- Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico
- Latin American Paintings, Latin American Gallery of the Metropolitan Museum and Art Center, Miami, Florida
- Printed Art: A View of Two Decades, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York
- 1981 - International Contemporary Art, Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City, Mexico
- 1982 - Drawings, Nahora Haime Gallery, New York, New York
- Important Paintings by European Figurative Artists, F.I.A.C., Grand Palais, Paris, France; and Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- Homo Sapiens: The Many Images, The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, Connecticut
- Drawing, Inter-American Art Gallery, New York, New York
- Forty-Eight Carnegie International Exhibition, Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington
- 1983 - Works on Paper by: Arikha, Botero, Bravo, Grooms, Katz, Kitaj, López-García, Petlin, Rivers, Welliver, Marlborough Gallery,
- New York, New York
- Nummer 6, Herbst '3, Galerie Levy, Hamburg, Germany
- 1984 - International Masters of Contemporary Figuration, Marlborough Fine Art, Tokyo, Japan
- 1985 - 16th Annual Invitational Contemporary Narrative Figurative Painting, Payne Gallery of Art, Moravian College, Bethlehem,
- Pennsylvania
- El Desnudo: Oleos Dibujos, Esculturas, Galeria Alfred Wild, Bogota, Colombia
- Nummer 8, Herbst '85, Galerie Levy, Hamburg, Germany
- Plastica Chilena Horizonte Universal, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Chile
- Pastels, Nohra Haime Gallery, New York, New York
- The Classic Tradition in Painting and Sculpture, The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art Ridgefield, Connecticut
- Twentieth Century American and European Artists, Claude Berndard Gallery, New York, New York
- 1986 - The Foundation Veranneman Invites Marlborough, Foundation Veranneman, Kruishoutem, Belgium (through 1987)
- 1987 - The First America: Selections from the Nancy Sayles Day Collection of Latin American Art, Center for Inter-American
- Relations, New York New York
- Recent Developments in Latin American Drawing, The Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois
- Recent Works by Arikha, Bacon, Botero, Bravo, Grooms, Katz, Kitaj, López García, Mason, Rivers, Welliver, Marlborough Gallery, New York
- 1988 - Visions/Revisions: A Contemporary Representation, Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- Nummer 9, Herbst '88, Galerie Levy, Hamburg, Germany
- 1989 - Art in Latin America: the Modern Era, 1820-1980, The Hayward Gallery, London, Great Britain
- 1990 - ARCO 90, Madrid, Soain
- Ocho Artistas Latinoamericanos, Galería Fernando Quintanta, Bogotá, Columbia
- Marlborough en Pelaires, Centre Cultural Contemporani Pelaires, Palma de Mallorca, Spain
- 1991 - Realismos: Arte Contemporáneo Español, Ashai Shimbun, Nihonbashi, Takashimaya, Tokoyo, Japan; Nanha Takashimaga,
- Oasaka, Japan; Shijo Takashimaga, Kiota, Japan; Takashimaya, Yokohama, Jaan
- Latin American Drawing Today, San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, California
- Selections from the Mary Crosby Kemper Collection, Kansas City, Missouri
- Paintings, Sculpture and Works on Paper by: Abakanowicz, Arikha, Auerbach, Bacon, Botero, Bravo, Grooms, Katz, Kitaj, Lipchitz, López García, Rivers, Schwitters, Valdés, Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1992- Jardín de Vidrio, Galería Leandro Navarro, Madrid, Spain
- On Paper, Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- 1993 - Drawings III, Koplin Gallery, Santa Monica, California
- 1994 - The Human Body, Nohra Haime Gallery, New York, New York
- Debut: Selections from the Permanent Collection of the Kansas City Art Institute, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, Kansas City, Missouri
- 1995 - 3 Continents: Botero, Bravo, Rivers, Valdés, A.M.S. Marlborough, Santiago, Chile
- Bravo/Tamayo/Toledo, Marlborough Graphics, New York, New York
- 1996 - On Paper, Marlborough Gallery, New York, New York
- Paper Visions: A Biennial Exhibition of Works on Paper by 24 Contemporary Latin American Artists, Housatonic Museum of Art, Bridgeport, Connecticut
- Latin Viewpoints into the Mainstream, Nassau County Museum of Art, Roslyn Harbor, New York
- Su Carta, Galleria d'arte il gabbiano, Rome, Italy
- 1997 - ART 1997 CHICAGO: 5th Annual Expo of International Galleries Featuring Modern and Contemporary Art, Navy Pier,
- Chicago
- 1998 - Forma y Figuracion: obras maestras de la coleccion Blake-Purnell, Museo Guggenheim, Bilbao, Spain
- 2000 - Art Miami 2000, International Art Exposition, Miami Beach Convention Center, Miami, Florida
- 2001 - Latin American Art: La Belleza y la Fuerza, Elkon Gallery, New York, New York
- Between Earth and Heaven: New Classical Movements in the Art of Today, Museum voor Moderne Kunst, Ostend, Belgium
- 2003 - Transforming the Commonplace, Susquehanna Art Museum, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
- A Singular Vision: Works from the Melvin Blake & Frank Purnell Collection, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts [7]
Public Collections
- Archer M. Huntington Gallery of Art, University of Texas (Austin, Texas)
- Art Museum, Florida International University (Miami, Florida)
- Art Museum, Princeton University (Princeton, New Jersey)
- Ateneum Art Museum (Helsinki, Finland)
- Baltimore Museum of Art (Baltimore, Maryland)
- Doane College Museum (Crete, Nebraska)
- Gibbes Museum of Art (Charleston, South Carolina)
- Indiana University Art Museum (Bloomington, Indiana)
- Kansas City Art Institute (Kansas City, Missouri)
- Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City, Missouri)
- Mitter Heinisches Landesmuseum (Mairiz, Germany)
- Museo de Arte Abstracto (Cuenca, Spain)
- Museo de Arte de Ponce (Ponce, Puerto Rico)
- Museo de Artes Visuales, Colección Santa Cruz-Yaconi (Santiago, Chile)
- Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Santiago, Chile)
- Museum Boymans-van Beuningen (Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
- Museum of Art, University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
- Museum of Fine Arts (Boston, Massachusetts)
- Peter Ludwig Museum (Cologne, Germany)
- Philadelphia Museum of Art (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
- Rufino Tamayo Museum of International Contemporary Art (Mexico City, Mexico)
- The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, New York)
- The Metropolitan Museum and Arts Center (Miami, Florida)
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, New York)
- The Museum of Modern Art (New York, New York) [7]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Valcarce, Paul Bowles; Mario Vargas Llosa. Interview by Hugo (1997). Claudio Bravo : paintings and drawings (1. ed. ed.). New York, NY ;London ;Paris: Abbeville Pr.
- 1 2 3 Camber, curated by Sam Trower ; with contributions by Diane W.; Blake, Dr. Melvin, Sullivan, Edward J. (1997). Claudio Bravo : wrapped packages. Miami Beach, Fla.: Bass Museum of Art. ISBN 188051110X.
- 1 2 Sullivan, Edward J. (1985). Claudio Bravo. New York, NY: Rizzoli. ISBN 0847806553.
- 1 2 3 4 Jelloun, Ben, Alaoui, Brahim, Sullivan, Edward J. (2004). Claudio Bravo and Morocco : exhibition presented at the Institut du Monde Arabe from March 16 to May 16, 2004.. Paris: Institut du monde arabe. ISBN 0897972627.
- ↑ Valcarce, Paul Bowles; Mario Vargas Llosa. Interview by Hugo (1997). Claudio Bravo : paintings and drawings (1. ed. ed.). New York, NY ;London ;Paris: Abbeville Pr.. ISBN 0789202077.
- ↑ Claudio Bravo.. [Naples, Fla.]: Naples Museum of Art. 2006. ISBN 0977301826.
- 1 2 3 4 Sullivan, Paul Bowles, Francisco Calvo Serraller, Edward J. (2005). Claudio Bravo : paintings and drawings (1964/2004) (Updated and expanded ed ed.). New York: Rizzoli.. ISBN 0847827496.
- ↑ Honolulu Museum of Art, wall label, Rocks, 1965, accession 31143
- ↑ "Claudio Bravo, World-Acclaimed Chilean Artist, Dies At 74". The Santiago Times.
- ↑ "Palace Agwidr Claudio Bravo Camus". Facebook.
- http://www.marlboroughgallery.com/Grfx_Pages/Bravo.html
- http://www.puc.cl/faba/ARTE/AUTORES/Bravo.html
- http://www.latinartmuseum.com/claudio_bravo.htm
External links
- ClaudioBravo.com Paintings and Drawings
- Works by Claudio Bravo "Claudio Bravo en Chile"
- Works by Claudio Bravo "La mayor pinacoteca virtual"
- Marlborough Gallery - Claudio Bravo Works
- Artnet - Claudio Bravo Artworks for Sale
- MFA Educators - Claudio Bravo Works
- Kempler Museum of Contemporary Art Collection
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Study Number 2 for Portrait of Mohamed
- Museum of Fine Arts Boston Collection
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