W
i
k
i
p
e
d
i
A
r
t
Showing posts with label artista conceptual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artista conceptual. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

El arte no va a transformar de inmediato la sociedad. Ni va a evitar que los niños sufran hambre, en ese sentido es inútil. El arte sirve otra función, de tipo espiritual. Abre las mentes y corazones de las personas a las vastas posibilidades de la vida humana. El arte siempre estará. No puedes evitar que la gente haga arte, porque es una necesidad humana. Necesitamos hacer un poema, cantar, pintar cuadros… Imagina el mundo sin eso, sin música o sin libros, o danza… es eterno, es una necesidad, es como la comida, una comida espiritual. Si no tenemos arte, moriremos espiritualmente. Paul Auster

Wednesday, August 2, 2023

El Lector disuelto Mirta Benavente

Monday, May 29, 2023

Seres Contemporáneos 74 Mirta Benavente

Saturday, November 27, 2021

Breve Instante de lo Imaginado Mirta Benavente Patricia Minardi Otero Instalación Areatec


Wednesday, October 14, 2020

THE WORLD THAT WAS, THE WORLD THAT IS

My sculpture,  Brooke with Beach Ball

 

My sculpture, Brooke with Beach Ball

We are living at a time that life seems surreal, and I ask myself if I’m imaging this. For the first three months of the pandemic, I sheltered in place at home. Seemingly overnight, the entire fabric of my daily life had been turned upside down. And yet—between trying to order groceries online, keeping up with the news, and by refreshing the New York Times homepage, it was important that I kept myself optimistic, energized, and entertained (and, perhaps, a little distracted). 

Staying occupied during the pandemic
Staying occupied during the pandemic

That didn’t work out too well. After a few days I was bored, so I bought a 500-piece puzzle and watched a lot of TV. I couldn’t focus enough to read or work from my computer. Then I got to thinking…no one is at my art studio in Bushwick, so I don’t think it would hurt if I drove there, parked my car inside, and started to create again, and that’s exactly what I did. I immediately had more energy, and started to feel alive again. 

My new sculpture,  Eyes Open

My new sculpture, Eyes Open

My eyes were open once again, but now I saw things I’d never seen before. A pandemic worldwide, looting and breaking windows, violence against protestors,  violence against the police, and the threat of American Democracy from a corrupt president and his followers from the far right, white supremacists, and the unthinkable now corrupt Republican Senate. 

In Venice placing finishing touches on my monumental sculpture,  Survival of Serena

In Venice placing finishing touches on my monumental sculpture, Survival of Serena

Art is me, and I am art. I get physically sick when I don’t work. Bringing people together, inspiring, soothing and sharing: these are the powers of art, the importance of which has been made emphatically obvious during the Covid-19 pandemic.

A video interview in London during my solo exhibition at BelAir Fine Art

A video interview in London during my solo exhibition at BelAir Fine Art

In January, I had a lot of deadlines, scheduled shows, and no time. Now I have time and no shows.  How does an artist keep going when the gallery system that supports her seems on the verge of temporary collapse?  Every curator, gallery director, and member of the art world seems to be home. I think the only benefit of this is that it’s time for a reset, a reprieve of the expectations that the art market puts on artists to produce, and to have and to share everything we make.  I’m fine making work in my own bubble because I make art for myself, regardless of whether I show it or not. 

Art Miami, 2019

Art Miami, 2019

The organized art world has responded beautifully to the lock-down and social-distancing protocols that are keeping people away from physical spaces. Art fairs like Art Basel and Art Dubai have gone online, and numerous galleries all over the world have responded to this new reality with online viewing rooms. The pandemic has closed museums and cancelled concerts, plunging many cultural institutions into uncertainty and immediate financial loss while also threatening a long-term effect on the arts. 

At the Met, Pandemic Era

At the Met, Pandemic Era

Ticket sales at museums account for a smaller percentage of total income than they do at opera houses or dance companies, yet already the carnage is mounting. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, with a princely endowment of $3.6 billion, has a projected loss of $100 million; institutions with smaller reserves are drawing down fast, and may never reopen. In a matter of days, the world of contemporary art went from a reverberate global network to a ghost town, sheltering in place as the coronavirus endangered our cities and our livelihoods. Like every other sector, art is having to go digital.

Video conferencing is the new norm

For artists, the show must go on, and Zoom is their venue.


Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Realidades Liquidas   Mirta Benavente


Sunday, October 20, 2019

Incertidumbres Geometricas 140x110cm
Mirta Benavente



La Grieta Geométrica  110x140cm
Mirta Benavente


Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Esferas de opiniones
Mirta Benavente