MIA Curatorial Projects' card
Palazzo Bembo view from the Grand Canal
America: Land of Dreams exhibition
Our goal is to foster dialogue and connection through the universal language of art, inviting art collectors, enthusiasts, and press from around the world to join us on this enriching journey— Milagros Bello, Ph.D.
VENICE, ITALY, April 18, 2024 /
EINPresswire.com/ -- Anticipation mounts as MIA Curatorial Projects prepares to showcase its latest exhibition, "Americas: Land of Dreams," at the European Cultural Centre’s biennial artexhibition in Venice, Italy. Coinciding with the 60th International
La Biennale di Venezia,
Personal Structures: Beyond Boundaries, organized biannually by ECC, offers an exceptional platform for parallel exhibitions, enriching the cultural landscape of Venice.
The seventh edition of Personal Structures, held from April 20th to November 24th, 2024, will feature renowned and
emerging international artists, photographers, sculptors, and performers, alongside art and academic institutions. Sara Danieli, Head of Art at ECC Italy, describes the exhibition as a vital artisticdialogue transcending borders, reflecting thecomplexities of our interconnected world. This eagerly awaited event promises to captivate audiences from around the globe.
In conjunction with the overarching theme of Personal Structures, MIA Curatorial Projects presents "America: Land of Dreams" curated by Dr. Milagros Bello This is MIA Curatorial Projects' 4th participation at the biennial in Venice. The immersive exhibition focuses on the intricate artistic practices of regions in North and South America, offering a diverse range of perspectives on the Human Condition. From surreal to hyperreal, abstract to apocalyptic, the artworks manifest a multifaceted scope of human experience.
Highlighted Artists and Their Styles:
Magaly Barnola Otaola (USA) envisions a deep sense of humanity through a rigorousfigure outlining an outmost inner force. A synthetic delineated entity is portrayed in amighty thermodynamic posture - his foot deeply rooted onto the earth, his left armpowerfully projecting into the cosmos - substantiating the universal energy all humanspossess.
Meg Cogburn (USA) proposes a reflection on Human Beings in stages of metamorphosisand rebirth. Emanating from her introspective spiritual inquiries, surreal beings areportrayed in hardships and transitions, overlayed through symbolic references to Voodoo Cosmograms and sacred geometries, revealing liminal and invisible forces of hermetic substances ingrained in the Latin American spirit.
Sergio Cesario (Brazil/USA) proposes digitally post-produced images pointing to theprosthetic future of Humans. In his Transhuman Series, - The Prophet of the New World Order and The Forthcoming Mona Lisa, — robotic figures decompose into archetyped politically loaded characters portrayed with their positive and negative connotations as new protypes of society.
Eliana Barbosa (Brazil/USA) exposes in her ephemeral photographs critical ghostly allocated characters as a reflection of social dissolution and existential crisis. Her creation method involves outlining silhouettes painterly dropped over the surface of a large can,then photographed before the ephemeral image dissolves onto the white paint.
Ricardo Carbonell (Venezuela), mastering the contemporary collage practice, proposes acompound of objects of consumption (stamps, seals, brand labels) articulated with tapecutouts and square and diagonal drawings in contrasted compositions of rhythmic tensions and dynamic collisions in a minimal approach to anthropological oriented and atthe same time abstract art.
Paul D. Chisholm (UK), a multifaceted conceptual artist, proposes an installation ofcushions as human shapes in a united compound of corpses embraced in dynamic interactions. Sensually intertwined, they evoke encounters, unifications, transactions, andexchanges in a metaphorical human interface.
Sylvia Constantinidis (Venezuela/USA), a musician, composer, and visual artist, creates multimedia installations involving a singular approach to art where music and painting,color and sound, correspond in a creative multi disciplinary combination. In her work, richly layered compositions displaying Pre-Hispanic Venezuelan pictograms merge into dynamic videos of aural and visual mixtures.
Mercedes Inaudi (Venezuela/USA) presents a multiple 25-piece work in a mixed media collage made from graphic signages, papercut news, graph types, and politically loaded phrases as signifiers of the current Venezuela crisis, underlining the power of the informational world and its weighty presence in our critical society.
Matt Jacobs (USA) features intricate, nature miniature paintings that contemporarily redefine the Baroque horror vacui. The pieces depict rapturous scenes with seductive flora and abundant greenery centered around a focal figure, a voluptuous and alluring cupcake, as a tactile and sensual connotation for eros and seduction.
Oksana Kirpenko (Ukraine/USA) portrays a human entity in an elusive distress. Through compositional pictorial subdivisions, a helmeted woman without skin ("senza pelle"), allflesh and muscles, emerges vulnerable but decisive, quiet but robust, and hieratic butintense as a reflection of human resilience and strength.
Esteban Machado Diaz (Cuba/Ecuador) Ode To Frida / portrays the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo in an exuberant Caribbean nature of symbolic echoes, in a contemporary approachto Latin American Surrealism: Frida as a procreative Goddess buoyant in Cuban foliage,shows a coconut flowing water as an "Orbis Mundi" expanding as a river, her back leadingwith a winged Monarch butterfly representing migration.
Karina Matheus (Venezuela/USA/UK) Her video delves into a quest for light and enhancement through a spiritual and artistic dialog with the British Sun and its multifaceted forms in the UK seasons employing the Andean ritual of Munay Ki. Herartistic recollections of the sun come from her daily walks amidst the ever-changingEnglish weather that contrasts with her reference to bathed sun places such as Caracas and Miami, where she has spent most of her life.
Clark Medley (USA) presents a self-inspired Arabesque alphabet, merging pictorial elements, dancing silhouettes, and twisting marks as unique glyphs imbued with existential meanings. Imaginary fonts marked by dynamic, repetitive strokes capture the essence of personal scripts shaped by perceptual and auditory experiential encounters.
Vered Pasternak (Israel/USA) reviews the critical poverty condition of the Homeless in America, defying the cliché phrase of "America. Land of the Free". Her oil stick on stopsigns reveals homeless outlined portraits that have merged from her interactive contactand, through the years, with the homeless people in Miami.
Beatriz Sanchez (Venezuela) presents three sculptures assembling a profuse compound of collected objects set up as relics of society and consumption symbols. They work ascomplex chains of cultural signifiers and paradigms of our postindustrial civilization.
Raul A. Vargas (USA) His assemblages allude to our critical ecological crisis. They containsmall, still, life-like academic paintings interconnected into a disgusting net of garbage collected from his environment. It is a vision of the Anthropocene era of devastating consequences.
These talented artists will showcase their works in dialogue with the rich cultural tapestry of the Americas.
For more detailed information, write to curator Dr. Milagros Bello at milabello@aol.com.
Rachele de Stefano
ECC-Italy
+39 340 467 5091
rachele@ecc-italy.eu
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Palazzo Bembo view from the Grand Canal
America: Land of Dreams exhibition