Alicia Paz

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Alicia Paz is an artist based in London, working internationally. Born in Mexico City, Paz graduated from UC Berkeley, École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts of Paris, Goldsmiths College and Royal College of Art London.[1]

Over several years, Alicia Paz has focused on the tension between artifice/ illusion and the veracity of actual processes involved in painting, exposing the duplicitous nature of representation. Through her work, she explores notions of hybridity, assemblage, and metamorphosis, focusing particularly on the female figure: the self is experienced and presented as multiple, fluid, paradoxical. Paz's paintings are as much portraits as they are landscapes, combining references that range from erudite painting or the history of the painted image,[2] to citations of advertising images or comics.[3] Inhabiting fantastical and exotic landscapes, Paz's feminine subjects become fused and combined with organic life. Strange and unsettling visions of tree-women and monster-women also represent the fusion of the Subject with painting itself: she often depicts amphibian or plant-like figures “weeping” pigment, their limbs, hair, and various ornamental accoutrements mud-caked and dripping, as if extracted from a colourful, post-cognitive swamp.

In August 2017 Paz unveiled a public sculpture commission at  [de] in Magdeburg, titled Insel der Puppen (Island of Dolls), in steel and enamel.[4][5] Paz's recent projects include a residency and exhibition at the Leonora Carrington Museum in Mexico (2019).

Selected works[]

  • Island of Dolls (Insel der Puppen), 2017, large exterior sculpture in email, steel and concrete, a commission for the Kunstmuseum Kloster Unser Lieben Frauen in Magdeburg
  • L'effrontée, 2011, mixed media on paper, 74 × 56 cm
  • Trapèze, 2010, oil, acrylic, collage on canvas 200 × 160 cm (FRAC Languedoc-Roussillon collection)
  • When the Machine Stops, 2006, oil, acrylic, collage on canvas, 130 × 97 cm (Colección Costantini, MALBA Museum, Buenos Aires, Argentina)
  • Ghosts, oil, acrylic on canvas, 200 × 160 cm, 1999 (FRAC Île-de-France collection)
  • Colossus, 1995, acrylic on canvas, 150 × 120 cm (FMAC Paris collection)

Exhibitions[]

Solo exhibitions (selection)[]

2010:

  • LAC Narbonne, in association with FRAC Languedoc-Rousillon for Casanova Forever, Sigean France[6]

2007:

2006:

  • Houldsworth Gallery, London, UK

2005:

  • Ruth Benzacar Gallery, Buenos Aires, Argentina[7]

2000:

  • Galerie Yvonamor Palix, Paris, France

Group exhibitions (selection)[]

2021:

2012:

  • Through the Looking Glass, The Agency Gallery, London, UK

2011:

  • Round and Round and Round (Part 2), exhibition drawn from the FRAC IDF Collection, curated by Xavier Franceschi, Parc culturel de Rentilly, France

2009:

  • Multiverse, curated by Ole Hagen, Danielle Arnaud Gallery, London, UK[9]

2008:

  • Jerwood Contemporary Painters, Jerwood Space, London, UK[10]

2007:

  • Celeste Art Prize, selected by Goldsmiths College Curating MA, London, UK
  • Incheon Biennale, Incheon, South Korea[11]

2006:

2004:

1999:

1998:

  • Tamayo Museum Biennale, Oaxaca, Mexico

Awards, grants and residencies[]

2002:

2001:

1999:

Collections[]

  • Musée d'Art Moderne de Céret, France[14]
  • Hanlim Museum, Daejeon, Korea[citation needed]
  • FMAC City of Paris, France[citation needed]
  •  [fr][citation needed]
  • FRAC Languedoc-Roussillon[citation needed]
  • Colección Costantini, MALBA, Buenos Aires, Argentina[15]
  • APT, Mexico City[16]

References[]

  1. ^ "Show catalogues of graduate student work at the Royal College of Art". Archived from the original on 23 November 2012. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
  2. ^ Charlesworth, JJ; Galerie Dukan&Hourdequin (2009). Alicia Paz: Unfinished Subjects. Marseille, France: Monografik Editions. ISBN 978-2-36008-003-8.
  3. ^ Lamy, Frank (2004). 3D, Alicia Paz, Andreas Hirsch, Samuel Choisy. Porto, Portugal: Maus Habitos.
  4. ^ Magdeburg, Volksstimme. "Insel der Puppen: Künstlerin gestaltet Skulptur". www.volksstimme.de (in German). Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  5. ^ "2017 | Kunstmuseum Kloster unser lieben Frauen Magdeburg". kunstmuseum-magdeburg.de. Retrieved 3 November 2019.
  6. ^ Latreille, Emmanuel (2010). Casanova Forever: 33 Expositions en Languedoc Roussillon (in French). Paris: Dilecta. ISBN 978-2-916275-72-7.
  7. ^ Hunt, Andrew (2005). Alicia Paz. Buenos Aires: Ruth Benzacar Gallery.
  8. ^ "Alicia Paz & Michael Szpakowski". Southend Museums 20. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  9. ^ Hagen, Ole; Poulson, Kit (2009). Multiverse. London: Danielle Arnaud Contemporary Art.
  10. ^ Jerwood Charitable Foundation (2008). Jerwood Contemporary Painters. London.
  11. ^ Incheon Culture and Arts Center (2007). Knocking on the Door: International Incheon Women Artists' Biennale. South Korea: Incheon Metropolitan City.
  12. ^ Mason, Andrea (September 2004). "East International". a-n Magazine.
  13. ^ "Gasworks Residencies". Archived from the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
  14. ^ "Musée d'art moderne de Céret - Collections - Liste des artistes". www.musee-ceret.com. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  15. ^ "When the Machine Stops".
  16. ^ "Alicia Paz". Artist Pension Trust. Retrieved 21 August 2021.

Further reading[]

  • Alicia Paz, Website of the artist
  • Uwe Gellner, Annegret Laabs, Jeannette Louie. Alicia Paz - The Garden of Follies. Verlag für Moderne Kunst, Vienna, 2016. ISBN 9783903004917
  • Deyries-Henry, Dorothée (2008). Permutations, 40 Artistes 01 musée vide. Musée de Valence.
  • Charlesworth, JJ (May 2007). "Alicia Paz". Time Out London.
  • Malherbe, Anne (December 2006). "Je revais d'un autre Monde". art press.
  • Lamy, Frank (August 2002). "Peinture, La Galaxie Française". Gazette des Beaux-Arts (219).
  • Piguet, Phillipe (May 2000). "Alicia Paz". L'ŒIL.'.
  • Lamy, Frank (May 2000). "Alicia Paz". Tribeca Magazine.
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