Fill out your data to get our latest news and publications








    Doris Salcedo’s Art in the United States

    Working with furniture and other everyday items, this artist has carved sculptures and created works inspired by Colombia's history. This year, a traveling retrospective will be showcased in Chicago, New York and Miami. 

    Visitors at the Tate Museum in London, England, in March 2008 may have thought that an earthquake hit the British capital. However, The 547-feet long crack snaking across the floor of the museum’s Turbine Hall was part of a piece called Shibboleth by Doris Salcedo.

    During an interview with BBC World, Salcedo defined this piece as an attempt to represent “the deep separation between humanity and those sidelined by society, stressing the strong, bottomless difference between these two worlds that can never reconcile”.

    Doris Salcedo, Doris Salcedo’s works, Shibboleth Doris Salcedo, Colombian art, Colombian artists, Colombians plastic artists

    Photo: Ted and Jen Shibboleth

    Doris Salcedo is not only the first Latin American artist showcasing her work at the Tate Museum in London, but also the winner of several awards, including the Penny McCall Foundation’s 2005 Ordway Prize, the 2010 Velazquez Award of Plastic Arts by the Ministry of Culture of Spain, and the Hiroshima Art Prize by the city’s Museum of Contemporary Art in 2014 to recognize her efforts to “show the potential of a strong resistance against the widespread violence and discrimination in the world”.

    Her works have been exhibited at the Venice Biennale and prestigious venues like the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, and the Queen Sofia National Center of Art Museum in Madrid, among others.

    In addition, an traveling retrospective is being showcased in the United States, paying homage to the career of this Colombian artist who seeks to preserve a country’s past through her body of work. “Memories are the essence of my work. I truly believe that we cannot live the present or face the future without turning to our past”, stated Salcedo during an interview for The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

    This retrospective, which opened last February in the Museum of Contemporary Art of Chicago, will be displayed in June 2015 in the renowned Guggenheim Museum in New York, and will reach its final destination in the Perez Museum in Miami in May 2016. This exhibition is an important honor for the artist, as these venues have featured very few Latin American artists.

    Among the works included in this exhibition are The Widowed House (La casa viuda), Unland, Disheartened (Atrabiliarios), Skin-deep (A flor de piel), Mourning (Accion de duelo), and the Mute prayer installation (La instalación Plegaria muda), among others. The exhibition will also feature a short film about some of the artist’s ephemeral works like Shibboleth and its participation in the 8th Istanbul Biennial (2003), where Salcedo used the empty space between two buildings to create a 3-floor column made of 1,550 chairs to refer to the history of migration and displacement in Istanbul.

     

     

     

    If you’d like to find out other reasons why when it comes to culture, the answer is Colombia, then please read the following articles:

    What do you know about Colombian contemporary art?

    Colombia, destination for shooting of foreign films

    7 curiosities about the Colombian artist Fernando Botero

    Rate this post
    Artículos recomendados
    james rodriguez, talento colombiano

    James Rodríguez, the New Idol

    Only at 22, and number 10 in the Colombian football team, James Rodriguez has already enchanted half of the world....
    street art Bogotá

    A tour of Bogotá’s world famous graffiti art

    Bogotá is the “Athens of Latin America” rich in museums and art galleries, universities, theaters and libraries and, when it...
    M2Malletier, Business, Colombia

    Five international Colombian brands you didn’t know were Colombian

    HATSU tea, Rappi deliveries, Aquazzura shoes, M2Malletier handbags and Touché swimwear are five internationally successful brands you didn’t know were...
    Colombian athletes represent #TheBestOfColombia

    Colombian athletes represent the best of the country

    Colombia is very well represented by its athletes. In the competition they not only deliver the best of themselves, they...
    Literature, Gabriel García Márquez, Nobel of Literature, One Hundred Years of Solitude, Books

    Gabo beyond One Hundred Years of Solitude

    Gabriel García Márquez is one of Colombia’s most famous sons. His most celebrated work, One Hundred Years of Solitude, was...
    Sports, Athlete, Cycling, Bike, Soccer, Football, Skate, Roller skate, Colombian athlete, talent

    12 Reasons why Sports make Colombians Extremely Proud

    Colombia has always managed to excel in several sports, especially in the last few years. Get to know 12 reasons...
    Mompox

    Missoma jewelry latest collection “Momposina” is inspired in Colombia and the ancient technique of filigree.

    Missoma -the London based- jewelry brand recent launch is all about Colombia, its pre-Columbian cultures and the art of filigree.
    Fernando Botero, Art, Sculpture, Colombian artist, Talent

    7 Curiosities About the Colombian Artist Fernando Botero

    Did you know that Fernando Botero considers fat figures as rather expanded? Get to know some curiosities about this famous...
    Featured Video Play Icon

    Nelson Cardona, an expeditionary role model

    The Colombian Seven Summits expedition, led by Cardona, wants to conquer the world’s highest peaks. 
    Colombian beauty pageants, Queen of beauty, Tourism, Colombian women

    Colombia’s Twelve Most Unexpected Beauty Pageants

    Appearances can be deceiving and that’s particularly true when it comes to beauty pageants, which are not all about looks....