Magali Lara
Magali Lara | |
---|---|
Born | 5 November 1956 (age 64) Mexico City |
Occupation | Visual artist, printmaker |
Magali Lara (born November 5, 1956, Mexico City) is a Mexican contemporary artist. Her works are presented in collections such as the Mexican Art Gallery, the Carrillo Gil Art Museum,[1] the Museum of Modern Art in New York,[2] the National Bank of Mexico, the University Museum of Contemporary Art (UNAM) and the UDLAP Art Collection.[3][1] She is considered a leading figure in the feminist contribution of the Mexican contemporary art movement. Lara has produced works as both an essayist and a visual artist. In her autobiographical writing, she describes her work as follows:
"My work is found in an intersection. Text and image coexist in different ways. As Siamese twins, that have developed different personalities but that, in the end, share a vital nucleus."
— Magali Lara
Biography[]
From 1976 to 1980, Lara studied Visual Arts at the National School of Plastic Arts, San Carlos. In 2011, she obtained a master's degree from the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos where she is a professor; she coordinates programs and content for the Painting Section of the Faculty of Visual Arts. She currently lives and works in Cuernavaca, Morelos.[5]
Her first recognised exhibition was held in 1977 during her bachelor's studies, under the name "Scissors". The exhibition consisted of ten cartoon drawings and an artist book.
During the decade of the seventies, her work began to reflect what it meant to be a woman in Mexico during this time, and the social conditions she had to undergo. Her works attributed to the growing movements of Feminism during the time.[6] Lara says that she became a feminist thanks to her mother, and painted flowers because her mother and grandmother did that together; her desire in this show, she adds, is to tell stories not so much from the platform of the female body, but from the experience of a body that has seen and wants to materialise emotion.[7]
In 1981, she participated as curator in the first exhibition of contemporary Mexican women artists that took place in the "Künstlerhaus Bethanien" in Western Berlin.[6][8]
She has also experimented the electronic media of Digital Art in Latin America, as well as painting, ceramics and animation projects.
Career[]
Lara has produced many pieces across varying mediums in her career. Some of her most important individual exhibitions have been Tijeras, in San Carlos (1977); Glaciers, at the Visual Arts Centre in Austin, Texas (2010); Titubeos, in the Mexican Art Gallery, (2011); Animations: Magali Lara, at the Amparo Museum in Puebla, (2012). Her first solo exhibition Tijeras featured ten drawings with texts in the style of comic books and an artist's book. She worked in the Março Group and collaborated with the Non-Group in the seventies. More recently, in 2014, BATIENTE 0.5, at Casa del Lago. Lara has also collaborated in collective projects such as The Age of Discrepancy: Art and Visual Culture of Mexico 1968-1997, which took place at the University Museum of Science and Arts (MUCA Campus), (2007); as well as A Possible Day, in collaboration with Javier Torres Maldonado, at , Centre National de Création Musicale in Paris, (2011), among others. In addition, she participated in the 5th Ibero-American Art Biennial, (1986); at the Third Monterrey Biennial, (1996), and at the V Biennial of Standards, in Tijuana, Baja California, (2008). She has been a beneficiary of the National System of Creators of the National Council for Culture and the Arts since 1994, and she won the Artist's Book Award with the book Que horte en ti lo que se pertene, in the framework of the International Fair of Artist's book, LÍA. Her work is housed in various museums and galleries, such as the Carrillo Gil Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Bank of Mexico, the University Museum of Contemporary Art and the Mexican Art Gallery. In recent years she has collaborated in projects on drawing, digital graphics, ceramics and animation. In addition, she has shown interest in the different ways in which contemporary graphic thinking can appear in different mediums, as well as having worked with different materials. She is currently collaborating on editorial projects with Ediciones Acapulco and is a counsellor for Casa del Lago, which belongs to the UNAM. Her interest in artist books is well-known. She organised several artist book shows for the United States and Brazil. In the eighties, she published visual poems in different specialised magazines. She began to explore painting and engraving, moving away from the groups to start a more personal investigation. In recent years she has collaborated in projects involving drawing, digital graphics, ceramics and animation. She is interested in the different ways in which contemporary graphic thinking can appear in different supports using different materials.
Glaciers (2010)[]
Lara's compositions often give the impression of the dynamism that characterises life cycles. As she puts it, 'there is nothing older than a sense of belonging',[7] and she would seem to be carrying this to its ultimate expression in her artistic practice. Glaciers, a digital animation of drawings on pencil with blue watercolour, is an emotional landscape destined to die in the same way that glaciers are temporal. The views of Argentina's Patagonia region replicate landscapes from the artist's own life: her widowhood and motherhood, as well as the passing of her father and siblings. By digitally “animating” these drawings, the characteristic principle of the landscape is subverted. In animation, the different shapes and compositions seem to move as they are presented in a sequence and in shots that turn and are juxtaposed, while the accompanying music provides the rhythm for the motion.
I Don't Remember (2008)[]
I Don't Remember (original title No Me Acuerdo) is an animation of the photographs Magali Lara made of herself as she drew them. It is inspired by the Alzheimer's her mother suffered for six years. Lara has revealed that her mother was able to recognise her on sight, but lacked the words to name her; once, before all her words were lost, she called her “cousin”.[7] The music in the animation (Javier Torres Maldonado) represents the internal voices of a female character engaged in an activity as banal as leaving work and returning home. Tying loose ends, I discover that there are many bodies in this show: not present, but alluded to.
Style[]
Magali Lara is one of the most significant Mexican conceptual artists since the 70s. time, her work has been enriched with the experimentation of techniques, but her ideas in relation to language, body, intimacy and desire have not changed and that is where the concept behind her work resides.
Lara's style has been acclaimed for its uniqueness, one critic has written that her work "is unmistakable and, as is obvious, persists in technically refining and polishing certain thematic aspects, but it is very curious to see that evolutionary process develop within the universe that she has long believed. merits, for that reason, they placed it not recently among the consummate realities of the plastic arts of our country.[9]
In terms of artistic influence, Lara has cited the experimental animator Norman McLaren. Her work has been influenced by her personal experiences as a woman in the 1970s feminist movements in Mexico and wider Latin American region. She has written that animation as a medium allows her the opportunity to represent the experiences of the feminine body.[1] As well as an emphasis on the feminine form, her art also focuses on the role of nature and the interactions humans have with it. What prevails is an organic element that is founded not only in vitality, but also in calmness. Her work is an exercise of the deep understanding of and participation in nature, rather than an attempt to represent them.
Listed works and roles[]
Collections[]
Lara's art collections are currently housed in various countries at many museums.
Collections | Country |
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The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York | United States |
Museo Amparo, Puebla, | Mexico |
University Museum of Contemporary Art | Mexico |
Museum of Sciences and Art of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico City | Mexico |
Museum of the Ministry of Finance and Public Credit, Mexico City | Mexico |
Museum of Contemporary Art of Oaxaca, Oaxaca | Mexico |
Carrillo Gil Art Museum | Mexico |
José Luis Cuevas Museum | Mexico |
Collection of Jacques and Natasha Gelman, Cuernavaca | Mexico |
Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst.Gent S.M.A.K, Ghent | Belgium |
Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York | United States |
Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach California | United States |
Gallery of Mexican Art | Mexico |
OMR Gallery | Mexico |
Fundación Televisa | Mexico |
Miguel Aleman Foundation | Mexico |
National Bank of Mexico | Mexico |
Membership of Societies and Cultural Institutions[]
Lara's participation in feminist activism and social art has been accompanied with her role in a number of groups.
Society or Institution Role | Year of admittance |
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Member of the Board of the Casa del Lago Museum, Juan José Arreola. | 2013 |
Honorary member of the Council for the Accreditation of Higher Education of Arts | 2010 |
Member of the Advisory Board of the virtual museum MUMA Museum of Mexican Women Artists | 2008 |
Volunteer member of the Visual Arts Committee of the Institute of Culture of Morelos | 2007 |
Member of the consultative commission of the Young Creators Program of the FONCA in the discipline of Graphic | 2003-2006 |
Collaborator with the Alternative Space Aragón y León | 2001 |
Member of the Exhibition Committee of the Carrillo Gil Art Museum | 1984-1985 |
Head of the Department of Cultural Diffusion of the National School of Plastic Arts, ENAP Xochimilco, Mexico | 1980-1985 |
Curator of the first exhibition about women contemporary art artists who traveled to Künstlerhaus Bethanien in West Berlin, Germany | 1981 |
Member of the exhibition committee of the Contemporary Art Forum, Mexico | 1979-1982 |
Accolades[]
Achievement | Year(s) |
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Admission to the National System of Artists | 2014, 2010, 2007, 2002 |
Artist's Book Award | 2013 |
Awarded Residency at Boca del Cielo, Chiapas, Mexico | 2002 |
Residence at The Banff Centre for the Arts, Banff, Alberta, Canada | 2000 |
Residence in Boréal Art / Nature. La Minerva, Québec, Canada | 1999 |
FONCA National Creators System Grant | 1997-1999 |
Honourable mention, V Euromerican Biennial of Art, | 1986 |
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil. "Magali Lara". Retrieved November 5, 2016.
- ^ "Magali Lara. Fear. (1989) | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
- ^ "Magali Lara – Currículuum". www.magalilara.com.mx/. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
- ^ "Magali Lara". Abstraction in Action. December 1, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
- ^ "GALERÍA – Catálogo – Magali LARA (México)". Archived from the original on August 21, 2016. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Mónica Mayer (September 3, 2014). "ARCHIVA: Obras maestras del arte feminista en México". Retrieved November 5, 2016.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Ledesma, Diana Cuellar. "Magali Lara - ArtNexus". www.artnexus.com. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
- ^ Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. "Margarita Rosa Lara Zavala". Retrieved November 5, 2016.
- ^ Lara, Magali (2004). Presentación por Juan Ramón de La Fuente. Mexico: Dirección General de Artes Visuales. UNAM. p. 9.
- 1956 births
- Living people
- Mexican women artists