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EDGAR ORLAINETA REGISTRO 04 ESPACIO TIEMPO 4 SEPT. 2015 MUSEO DE ARTE CONTEMPORÁNEO DE MONTERREY (MARCO) ZUAZA Y JARDÓN S/N, CENTRO MONTERREY, N.L. MÉXICO
By Jose Falconi For being such a sparse artistic school, driven by a hyperrationalistic agenda and an insatiable/irrational desire for universalism, twentieth-century (architectural) modernism seems to have/exhibit an almost baroque history just underneath some of its most crowning achievements. Although it might come up as surprise to some—not without a small doses of irony or poetic justice for such militant clean-cut ethos always ended up looking more suspicious than anything— for those who have followed (Mexican) Edgar Orlaineta’s body of work this seemly contradiction between the principles of modernism and the actual way they unfolded in history is hardly news. The truth is that things were never so shinny nor straight as they appear in the glossy magazines of the time, and it is this critical distance between fact and ethos that serves as the very foundation for Orlaineta’s art: if there is an aspect/angle which distinguishes his work from the many other artist investigations on modernism in Latin America has been precisely that his continued engagement with the material has always pointed out the numerous inherent contradictions over which it has been built. It is there, in the treacherous terrain of contradictions, where almost everyone fumbles and falls, where Orlaineta not just survives, but actually thrives in/on it. Of course, Orlaineta had what it could be considered the most hardcore training in learning how seemly contradictions end up becoming, suddenly, a coherent, legitimate totality—one which might even work at the highest national levels—as he has been a meticulous researcher of perhaps the biggest mirage of all in this part of the world over the last century: Latin American
Modernism. That is: he knows, intimately, that between what is proposed in the abstract (in the ideal plane) and what actually ends up happening (the factual results), there is a large and critical gulf that can not be breached and which has ended up defining our (jaded) experience and understanding of these type of projects. Indeed, if there is something that defines the landscape of our meager version of modernity is precisely this chiasm between the ideal and the concrete, and for which it shouldn’t come up as a surprise that most of his body of work that he is known for in the last few years stages in one way or the other this perennial conflict between the ideal plane and the crude, organic reality. Works such as Giuseppe and Maria (2006-2007) or Spirits or even Karl (2006-2007) they all stem from choreographing the conjunction (clash? overlap?) between the perfect ideal shape and the organic imperfect reality. All of these works acquire depth by positioning in precisely the center of this truncated, complicated relation between these two plains, represented by the organic (plants, cacti) and the steel that swirls around it. The same could be said of his remarkable XXX –a series of “tables” that stage this same conflict through the texture and the forms given to the material: the very piece is a choreographed landscape of this very tension, this time embodied in the relation between the terseness of the polishing of the material, and the bumpy forms it suddenly takes across its length. It is the relation between texture and shape which ends up positing the ultimate dictum: after all, Modernism might not be as straight laced, as it was once thought –especially in the tropics (Machado de Assis, dixit). For such reason, and if seen as a whole, we can probably appreciate the delicate contours of the paradox that Orlaineta
might have been trying to delineate all along in his career: underneath the terse cleanness of modernism there might be a much more murkier history–one that might actually border the embrace of its very antithesis, or the irrationality it tried to leave behind. In fact, if there is a particular quality of his latest suite of works centered on the figure of the great designer Alvin Lustig– renowned for his design of the legendary New Direction’s New Classic literary collection in the United States--is that it confronts head-on such paradox, by dwelling into his story. Consider, for example, Una Vida [A Life] were he subjected the palm of Lustig captured in a photograph to the interpretation of a palm reader: the work acquires its density through the (comical) dislocation of discourses. It is the designer hand’s were ultimately his talent and skills end up performing what it seem to have already been written in the stars since day one. At the end, it seems, it was not a matter of Lustig upbringing, his training, his program or even the way modernism as a whole unfolded. In fact, the whole thing was already a given outcome–at least that is the unsettling feeling we ended up with. And thus, the absurd dislocation –who in the world really fully believes in a palm reader?—ends up opening the possibility that, ultimately, it is just mere chance which is at play here. In other words: a small suspicion of absurdity is implanted at the very core of our interpretation, as if history (personal, social) might just be first and foremost a result of chance.
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THE ROSE TATTOO 2014 Acero latonado, madera, òleo y libro (“The Rose Tattoo por Tennessee Williams”, editado por James Laughlin, New Direction Books, New York, 1951) 13 3/8 x 13 3/8 x 8 11/16 plg. (34 x 34 x 22 cm.)
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THE SEXUAL GENTELMENS´ AGREEMENT 2015 Acero latonado, madera, pintura acrílica, hilo de seda y revista (“Neurotica No.6”, editado por Jay Irving Landesman, Neurotica Publishing Co., New York, 1950). 29 1/8 x 24 7/16 x 16 15/16 plg. (74 x 62 x 43 cm.)
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SPEARHEAD 2014 Latón, madera y libro (“Spearhead-10 years’ experimental writing in America”, editado por James Laughlin, New Direction Books, New York, 1947). 13 x 9 13/16 x 10 1/4 plg. (33 x 25 x 26 cm.) the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
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ROBINSON Y WOOLF 2015 Acero latonado, madera, aglomerado, vidrio, hule y libros (“The masters of modern literature-Virginia Woolf” por David Daiches y Edwin Arlington Robinson por Yvor Winters, editdos por James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1942 y 1946). 27 9/16 x 21 5/8 x 19 11/16 plg. (70 x 55 x 50 cm.)
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MONDAY NIGHT 2015 Acero latonado, madera, tinta china y libro (“Monday Night” por Kay Boyle editado por James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1938). 7 7/8 x 18 1/8 x 15 3/4 plg. (20 x 46 x 40 cm.) the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
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ONE ARM 2015 Acero latonado, madera, óleo y libro (“One arm” por Tennessee Williams editado por James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1948). 17 3/4 x 17 5/16 x 15 3/4 plg. (45 x 44 x 40 cm.)
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THREE TALES 2015 Madera, acero latonado, aluminio anodizado, óleo, pintura acrílica, hilo, aglomerado y libro (“Three Tales” por Flaubert, editado por James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1924). 20 1/16 x 15 3/8 x 12 3/16 plg. (51 x 39 x 31 cm.)
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WOLFE, GIDE, SHAW Y MANN 2014 Madera, coral, acero latonado, óleo y libros (“The makers of modern literature-Thomas Wolfe por Herbert J. Muller, Andre Gide” por Van Meter Ames, Bernard Shaw por Eric Bentley y Thomas Mann por Henry Hatfield editados por James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1947, 1947, 1947, 1941). 11 7/16 x 13 x 10 1/4 plg. (29 x 33 x 26 cm.)
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THE MAN WHO DIED 2015 Latón, madera, acero, pintura electrostatica, óleo, cera y libros (“The Man who died” por D.H. Laurence, editado por James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1950). 9 13/16 x 22 1/16 x 16 9/16 plg. (25 x 56 x 42 cm.)
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THE PSYCOPATHOLOGY OF TIME & LIFE (NEUROTICA 5) 2015 Madera, latón, Acero latonado, acrílico y revista (“Neurotica 5”, Neurotica Publishing Co., Inc., Conn., 1949). 13 x 15 3/8 x 12 5/8 plg. (33 x 39 x 32 cm.) the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
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THE DAY OF LOTUS / THE LANGUAGE OF ADVERTISING 2015 Madera, latón, libro y revista (“The Day of the Locust” by Nathanael West, edited by James Laughlin, New Directions Books, New York, 1950) and magazine (Fortune-Nov. 1952). 11 13/16 x 12 3/16 x 15 3/4 plg. (30 x 31 x 40 cm.)
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INCANTACIÓN (SINDROME POLLOCK AZUL) 2015 Serigrafía sobre lino 70 1/16 x 70 1/16 plg. (178 x 178 cm.)
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INCANTACIÓN (SINDROME POLLOCK ROJO) 2015 Serigrafía sobre lino 70 1/16 x 70 1/16 plg. (178 x 178 cm.)
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INCANTACIÓN (SINDROME POLLOCK AMARILLO) 2015 Serigrafía sobre lino 70 1/16 x 70 1/16 plg. (178 x 178 cm.)
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0 1 4 INCANTATION MADERA (SEMILLAS) 2015 Serigrafía y madera sobre lino 48 x 48 x 2 3/4 plg. (122 x 122 x 7 cm.)
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0 1 5 INCANTATION MADERA (HONGOS) 2015 Serigrafía y madera sobre lino 48 x 48 x 2 3/4 plg. (122 x 122 x 7 cm.)
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INCANTATION MADERA (ABEJA) 2015 Serigrafía y madera sobre lino 48 x 48 x 2 3/4 plg. (122 x 122 x 7 cm.)
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INCANTATION MADERA (TOTEMS) 2015 Serigrafía y madera sobre lino 48 x 48 x 2 3/4 plg. (122 x 122 x 7 cm.)
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INCANTATION MADERA (ESPINAS) 2015 Serigrafía y madera sobre lino 48 x 48 x 2 3/4 plg. (122 x 122 x 7 cm.)
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TÍTULO año materiales in.(cm.)
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ALVIN Y ELAINE 2015 Indumentaria hecha a medida. Trapos de pintar, serigrafĂa y tela. 66 15/16 x 51 3/16 in.(170 x 130 cm.)
the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
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the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
VISTA DE LA EXHIBICIÓN
the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
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the 9.99 gallery - GUATEMALA - EDGAR ORLAINETA
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EDGAR ORLAINETA México, D.F., 1972 Sistema Nacional de Creadores desde 2008. SELECCIÓN DE EXPOSICIONES INDIVIDUALES / SELECTED ONE-PERSON EXHIBITIONS 2015 Edgar Orlaineta, KaBe Contemporary, Miami, FL, USA. Edgar Orlaineta. RHContemporary Art, N.Y., N.Y. USA 2014 With the eye in the hand/with the hand in the eye, after Alvin Lustig’s “Incantation” FLGallery, Milán, Italia MetaModern. Krannert Art Musuem, Champaign, Illinois.Itinerante Zona Maco Sur, Mexico City (curated by Juan Andrés Gaitán) Domestic Conspiracy, PIRWI, Mexico City Suspended, Miart, Milan 2013 Totem after Ettore Sottsass, Armani Antara, ZonaMACO, Mexico City (curated by Carlos Palacios) La Historia, Ella Misma y Yo, Museo Universitario del Chopo, Mexico City (curated by Daniel Garza Usabiaga) Katsina Horizon, Bloom Projects, Museum of Contemporary Art, Santa Barbara 2011 Solar Nothing, Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles 2010 Monocrome Set, Casa Estudio Luis Barragan, Mexico City La Vida En Rosa, Azul y Amarillo, Casa Estudio Luis Barragan, Mexico City Chance Encounters, Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City Chance Encounters, Artissima Art Fair. Torino, Italy, PRESENT FUTURE project (curated by Jimena Acosta)
2009 We Are Ugly But We Have The Music, Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City De Todas Las Cosas Que Hemos Hecho, el Clauselito, Museo de la Ciudad de México, Mexico City (curated by Mauricio Marcin) 2008 Spirits, Sara Meltzer Gallery, New York City 2007 Ghosts, Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City Introductions, Sara Meltzer Gallery, New York City 2006 Dandy in the Underworld, Jet Gallery, Berlin (curated by Tilman Wendland) Historia Parallela-La Silla De C.U., M.U.C.A. C.U. Mexico City (curated by Jimena Acosta) Cargo Cult, Cuchifritos Project Space, New York (curated by Paul Clay) 2005 The Idea of Work, Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City Medios Masivos, La Celda Contemporaria, Universidad del Claustro de Sor Juana, Mexico City, (curated by Sol Henaro) 2002 La Belleza No Es Mia, Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City SELECCIÓN DE EXPOSICIONES COLECTIVAS / SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2015 “La Desintegración de la forma,” The 9.99 Gallery, Ciudad de Guatemala, Guatemala. The composing room after Alvin Lustig. Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey, MARCO, Monterrey, N.L., México .
Incantation, Alfabeto Ciego. Flora ars-natura, Bogotá, Colombia.
2014 New Territories: Laboratories for Design, Craft and Art in Latin America, Museum for Arts and Design, New York (upcoming) Copias: transformación y evolución de procesos creativos, Archivo de Diseño y Arquitectura, Mexico City 2013 TROPICALIA NEGRA, Museo Experimental el ECO, México, D.F. 9a BIENAL MERCOSUL, Porto Alegre, Brasil. SUSPENDED, Steve Turner Gallery, L.A., Miart, Feria de arte de Milán. Milán, Italia. La Historia, Ella Misma y Yo. Museo Universitario del Chopo, México, D.F. Proyecto Basurto, Steve Turner Contemporary, Mexico City Forecast, Portals, and Several Monotypes, Museu de Arte do Rio Grande do Sul, The 9th Bienal do Mercosul Porto Alegre, Brazil (curated by Daniela Pérez) Black Tropicália, Museo Experimental el Eco, Mexico City (curated by Willy Kautz) Un Mal Necesario, Bucareli 234, Planta Baja, Mexico City 2012 Solidarity: a memory of art and social change, Averill and Bernard Leviton A+D Gallery, Chicago, Ill. Neo Natural, Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles Exhibitions: Santiago Borja, Edgar Orlaineta, Tilman Wendland, LA><ART, Los Angeles Factory Direct: Pittsburgh, The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh 2011 Multitude, Orebro Konsthall, Orebro, Sweden (curated by Christer Fallman, Gabriel Mestre and Mats Nilsson) Transurbaniac, MUAC, Mexico City 2010 Portugal Arte – Billboard project, Lisbon, Portugal (curated by Lauri Firstenberg and Cesar Garcia)
Transurbanic, U.C.S.D, San Diego (curated by Guillermo Santamarina) México – Chapultepec 1904, San Carlos Centro Cultrural, Mexico City, Mexico (curated by Bárbara Perea and Minory León) The Well, The Yossef Weissman Municipal Art Gallery, Tel-Aviv, Israel (curated by Orly Hafmann) Cafe Tcshichold, Cuchifritos, New York City (curated by Edgar Orlaineta) 23D, MH Gallery. Tel-Aviv, Israel (curated by Orly Hoffman) Quatet, Sara Meltzer Gallery, New York (curated by Rachel Gugleberger and Jeffrey Walkowiak) Creacion en Movimento (20 años de Jóvenes Creadores-FONCA), Biblioteca José Vasconcelos Hecho en Casa, Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City El Ahijado, Alterna y Corriente, Mexico City (co-curated by Alejandro Almanza, Anibal Catalán, Miguel Cordera, José Luis Cortés, Lucía Díaz y Helena Fernández-Cavada) 2008 Los Moviles. (II Trienal Poligráfica de San Juan de Puerto Rico), San Juan, Puerto Rico (co-curated by Jens Hoffman, Julieta González and Adriano Pedrosa) La Cooperativa De Arte En Video, Laboratorio de Arte Alameda. Mexico City (curated by Fernando Llanos) Recursos Incontrolables y Otros Desplazamientos Naturales. A selection from the permanent collection Museo Univesitario de Arte Contemporaneo, MUAC, Mexico City (curated by Oliver Debroise) Las Lineas de La Mano, Museo Univesitario de Arte Contemporaneo, MUAC, Mexico City (curated by Jimena Acosta) Works of Art With a Minimum of Steel, at Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City LatinoLatino, Pallazzo della Vicaria in Trapani (curated by Raffaella Guidobono) Implant, The Horticultural Society of New York at USB gallery, New York City, (curated by Jodie Vicenta Robinson) W.D.A.O.V.T.O.P.N.N.M.T.B.V., organized by Michalis Pichler,
Presentation at Baso, Berlin. Distribution by Revolver, Frankfurt Transit Cases: Chairs from Mexico, Centro Cultural Univesitario Tlatelolco, Mexico City, (curated by Jimena Acosta)
The Peekskill Project, Peekskill, New York (curated by Natalie Angles, Paul Clay, Erin Donnelly, Lance Fung, Dr. Kòan Jeff-Baysa, Alison Levy, Jessica Rogers, Sue Stoffel, and Joseph R. Wolin)
2007 Elefante Negro, Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli, Mexico City (curated by Ximena Apisdorf and Edgar Orlaineta) Currents: Recent Acquisitions, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. (curated by Anne Ellegood) Inventario, Museo de Arte Carillo Gil, Mexico City (curated by Victor Palacioas) Red Badge of Courage, The National Newark Building, Newark (curated by Omar López-Chahoud) Deambulante, Galería José María Velasco, Mexico City (curated by Alfredo Matus) Hecho en Mexico: VIDEO ARTE MEXICANO CONTEMPO-RANEO. LOOP ’07, organized by Fernando Llanos, Caixa Forum Barcelona, Barcelona Ceci N’est Pas…, Sara Meltzer Gallery, New York City (curated by Rachel Gugelberger and Jeffrey Walkowiak) Perdidos en el Despacio, Fundació espais d’art contemporani, Girona (curated by Ximena Labra and Artemio)
2003 Contemporary Mexican Video Art: A program of short works hosted by Ruben Gutierrez. Mexico Illuminated/ México Iluminado, Freedman Gallery, Pennsylvania The Vanishing City, Programa Art Center, México City, Museum of Installation, London (curated by Nicola Oxley, Nicolas de Oliveira and Jeremy Wood)
2006 Denial is a River, Sculpture Center, New York (curated by Anthony Huberman and Sarina Basta) Relativo, MUCA, Museo Univercitario de Ciencias y Arte, Campus Roma. Universidad Nacional, Mexico City (curated by Bárbara Perea) 2005 Critic’s Select, The Shore Institute of the Contemporary Art, New Jersey (curated by D.Dominick Lombardi and Raúl Zamudio) Breve Historia Contada a Mano, Centro de Arte de la Comunidad de Madrid (curated by Gonzalo Ortega) MÉXICO 70, Museo de la Casa del Lago, UNAM. Mexico City (curated by Erik Castillo)
2000 Erogena, Museo de Arte Carillo Gil, Mexico City and S.M.A.K., Ghent (curated by Magalí Arriola) Pasaje Iturbide, Museo de la Ciudad de México, Mexico City (curated by Terence Gower) Cinco Continentes y Una Ciudad-Segundo, Salon Internacional de Pintura, Museo de la Ciudad de México, Mexico City (curated by Cuauhtémoc Medina) 1998 Instalaciones Para Sito Especifico, Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City 1997 Cambio, Temporary space, New York, Museo Universitario del Chopo, Mexico City (curated by Kenny Schachter)No Soy Chino, Art & Idea, Mexico City (curated by Ruben Gallo) New Texts From Mexico, Art Deposit, New York City 1996 Environmex, Art Deposit, Mexico City (curated by Ulises)
PREMIOS/ AWARDS 2014 Premio Tequila 1800, Zona Maco Sur, Mexico City 2008 Sistema Nacional de Creadores, FONCA, Mexico Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, Pollock-Krasner Foundation, New York International Residency Program, Banff Center, Canada, FONCA, Mexico 2007 International Residency Program, Pilotprojekt Gropiusstandt, Berlin 2006 Young Creators Grant, New Forms, FONCA, Mexico International Residency Program, Triangle Art, New York 2005 International Residency Program, ArtOmi, New York International Residency Program, Braziers, London 2002 Study Aboard Grant, MFA at Pratt Institute, New York FONCA, Mexico 2001 Young Creators Grant, Painting, FONCA, Mexico 1997 Special Projects Grant, Art Deposit, FONCA, Mexico City
SELECCIÓN BIBLIOGRÁFICA / SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY Noreña, Aurora. “De todas las cosas que hemos hecho.”(2009) Marcin, Mauricio, “Enanos encaramados en hombros de gigantes.” (2009) Rosemberg, Karen. “Yes, the live music is lovely, but will the plants like it,” New York Times, August Palacios, Victor, “Binding Durations,” Flash Art, (2008) Zamudio, Raul. “Spirits,” Flash Art, (2008) Gopnik, Blake. “Function following form,” The Washington Post, (2008) Wolin, Joseph R. “Spirits,” Time Out New York, (2008) Dietsch, Deborah K.“Hirshhorn’s newest art,” Washington Times, (2008) Baker, R.C. “Spirits,” The Village Voice, (2008) Canning, Susan. “Denial is a River,” Sculpture, (2008) Conner, Jill. “Denial is a River,” The Brooklyn Rail, Dec/Jan (2008) Manley, Jennifer. “Denial is a River,” Queens Chronicles, (2008) McAdams, Shane. “Spirits,” Chelsea Now, (2008) Peran, Martí. “Spatial Occupation Exercise to Try to Say Quickly that Space is Constructed, (2008) Slowly,” Perdidos en el despacio, Fundació Espais d’Art Contem porani, Girona Wendland, Tilman. “Edgar Orlaineta-Dandy in the Underworld,” Jet gallery, Berlin (2006) Ortega, Gonzalo. “Breve historia contada a mano,” Centro de arte Jóven, Madrid Zamudio-Taylor, Victor, “Edgar Orlaineta,” Origina (2005) Gallo, Ruben. “New Tendencies in Mexican Art – The 1990s,” Palgrave Macmillan (2004) Arriola, Magalí. “Burbujas de jabón” for the exhibition catalogue of Erogena, Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil, Mexico City, Mexico/ SMAK, Ghent (2000)
Medina, Cuauhtemoc. “Post Nacional y Post Pictórico.” Cinco continentes y una ciudad, Museo de la Ciudad de México, Mexico City (2000) Holland, Cotter. “Cambio,” The New York Times, (1997) COLECCIONES PÚBLICAS / PUBLIC COLLECTIONS Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Washington, DC. MUAC, Museo Universitario Arte Contemporaneo, UNAM. Ciudad de México. Caixa Forum Barcelona. Barcelona, España. Hammer Museum, Los Angles, California, U.S.A. C.C.A. Wattis Institute of Cantemporary Art, San Francisco, C.A. KADIST, Paris/San Francisco. Museo Amparo. Puebla, Mexico. Museo Universitario del Chopo, Mexico City, Mexico. Colección Tequila 1800, México, D.F. Colección JUMEX, México, D.F. DISTINCIONES / DISTINCTIONS Premio Tequila 1800, México. 2014. Grahan Foundation Grant. Chicago, US. 2010 Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte. FONCA. México. 20082011 y 2012-2015 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant. Pollock-Krasner Foundation. Nueva York, NY. 2008 International Residency Program en el Banff Center. Canada. FONCA. México. 2008 Jóvenes Creadores. Medios Alternativos. FONCA. México. 2006-2007 Beca de apoyo para estudios en el extranjero. Maestría en Pratt Institute en NY, NY. Fonca. México. 2002-2004 Jóvenes Creadores. Pintura. FONCA. México. 2001-2002
EDUCACIÓN / EDUCATION: Pratt Institute, Nueva York, NY. 2002-2004 Maestría con especialidad en Escultura Escuela Nacional de Pintura, Escultura y Grabado, La Esmeralda, Ciudad de México 1993-1998 Licenciatura en Pintura RESIDENCIAS / RESIDENCIES Banff Center. Banff, Canada. 2008 Pilotprojekt Gropiusstandt. Berlin. 2007 Triangle Art. Nueva York, NY. 2006 ArtOmi. Nueva York, NY. 2005 Braziers. Londres. 2005
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EDGAR ORLAINETA REGISTRO 04 ESPACIO TIEMPO 4 SEPT. 2015 MUSEO DE ARTE CONTEMPORÁNEO DE MONTERREY (MARCO) ZUAZA Y JARDÓN S/N, CENTRO MONTERREY, N.L. MÉXICO
Director: Jose López joselopez@the9.99.gt / +(502) 5719-4083 General inquiries: Ximena Apisdorf Soto ximena@the9.99.gt Jennifer de León jennifer@the9.99.gt info@the9.99.gt Open: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 12:00 - 17:00 hrs. Saturday 9:00 - 17:00 hrs. 5a ave. 11-16, zona 1, Edificio Passarelli, 2do nivel Centro Histórico Ciudad de Guatemala Guatemala, Guatemala. 01001 Phone: +(502) 2238-3975 www.the9.99.gt
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