While studying at the Slade, De la Cruz removed the
stretcher bar of a painted canvas. De la Cruz was inspired by the resulting saggy painting, and she has become best known for paintings which are deliberately broken or distorted. In her words: "One day I took the cross bar out and the painting bent. From that moment on, I looked at the painting as an object." Her work, treating paintings as a three-dimensional object rather than a two-dimensional representation, follows a tradition that includes the
spatialism of
Lucio Fontana in the 1940s. Her 1995 work
Ashamed, is a small straw-yellow painting, broken in half, which is exhibited wedged into a corner between two gallery walls. The similar 1996 work
Homeless, a much larger canvas of similar pale yellow hue, has its frame broken in two and folded, and is exhibited lurking in a corner, standing on the gallery floor.
Waldemar Januszczak has described
Ashamed as "peewhite" and
Homeless as "urine coloured".
Self (1997) comprises a chair and two dark brown paintings: one canvas draped broken over a chair, juxtaposed to an intact canvas hung on the wall.
Ready to Wear (1997–2003) is series of red canvases, part-ripped from its frame, as if the painting were getting dressed. "Nothing" (1998–2005) is a series of black canvases, crumpled into a heap and abandoned on the gallery floor, resembling a discarded black plastic bag. She was commissioned to paint
Larger Than Life in 1998 for the ballroom at the
Royal Festival Hall. She was nominated for the
Turner Prize for this show in 2010. She received Spain's
National Award for Plastic Arts in 2017. In recent years de la Cruz has also used aluminium as a base material for her work. The metal is welded into shape, then crushed, beaten and distorted. This body of work has been exhibited in 'Burst' at the Lisson Gallery, Milan, in 2013 along other exhibitions. ==References==