Jump to content

Aimée Joaristi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 07:12, 7 February 2024 (Removing from Category:21st-century women artists using Cat-a-lot). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Aimée Joaristi
Born
Aimée Joaristi Argüelles

(1957-08-24) August 24, 1957 (age 67)
Havana, Cuba
Occupation(s)Interior designer, architect and visual artist
Years active2017-present
Notable workTres cruces (2018), Manifiesto Púb(l)ico (2019)
MovementExpressionism
Websitewww.aimeejoaristi.com

Aimée Joaristi (born 1957) is a multidisciplinary Cuban artist.[1] Her works include painting, installation, video art, photography and performance.[1]

She has participated in individual and collective exhibitions, and her works are situated in both public and private collections in Cuba, Chile, Latvia, Spain, Costa Rica, France, Mexico and the United States. [1][2]

Biography

Joaristi was born in Havana, Cuba, and lived there with her family until the start of the Cuban Revolution of 1959. In response to simmering civil unrest, her family moved to Miami, when Joaristi was three years old. The family would later retreat into exile to Madrid, Spain, the home of her paternal grandparents and maternal great-grandparents.[3] While living in Madrid, Joaristi visited museums and galleries in the city with her uncle, in addition to learning about various cultures, towns and buildings while traveling with her parents in Europe.[4] She took an early interest in the work of Salvador Dalí, which would later come to influence the surrealist nature of her work. At the age of 17, she began her studies in interior architecture in Madrid and at the age of 20, she began the study of graphic design at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City.[4][3]

She worked in Milan in the fashion world of Prêt-à-porter and as an interior designer, which years later motivated her to open an architecture and interior design studio in Costa Rica. [5]

In 2008 she focused completely on her art.[4]

Awards and recognition

She won the International Emerging Artist Award (IEAA) in 2016 and Contemporary Art Curator Magazine's Artist of the Future Award in 2020. [2]

She was selected for the following collections: Art and Fashion, Britain, “La Fiesta del Laberinto” for textile design (2013); seven consecutive times for the Pop and Op Surrealism collection at the Saatchi Gallery (2013); and foulards by Ostinelli Seta (2014).[2]

Among her commissioned works is "The End of the Beginning" (2015, Saatchi Gallery). [2]

Current work

In her artistic practice, Joaristi often engages in parallel work development, resulting in continuous projects. Since 2020, she has been working on a project called "Cayados," which comprises 13 ceramic sculpted canes and a video art piece that explores the interplay between fragility and strength. The inspiration for this project came after Joaristi experienced a spinal injury at the beginning of 2020, symbolizing certain emotions and events she went through during that year. [4]

She has permanent collections at Museo de Artes Decorativas y Diseño (Latvia), Arte Al Límite (Chile), Kendall Art Center (United States), Museo Wifredo Lam (Cuba), Museo La Neomudéjar (Spain), and Museo Zapadores (Spain).[citation needed]

Tres cruces (2018)

This work recounts a tragic event that occurred in Costa Rica on April 6, 1986, when seven women were raped and murdered after participating in a pilgrimage activity in La Cruz de Alajuelita. The crime of case of La Cruz de Alajuelita has not been clarified to date nor has anyone linked to the crimes been publicly prosecuted. For this work, Joaristi reflects on the connection between the languages of her previous work and how abstraction and landscape guide the viewer through the geography of the event. [4][6]

…The place was very close to me both because of its location in the Cerros de San Miguel of Escazú where I live, and because it is the destination for morning walks where I start my day. Without further ado, and in search of images (...) to articulate this project, I threw myself voraciously on the mountain, armed with a camera, a cane, and water. I went up without thinking about the effort. I only thought about the meaning I should give to this fact and how to "appropriate" a tragic moment, ruled by the pain of others, to translate that experience through the language of art.[6]

Tres Cruces, is a video installation complemented with painting and photography, mixing traditional art and technology; It is made up of three scenes or spaces that seek to show the gender violence that surrounded this event. In addition, it is accompanied by a video art that shows the crime zone from a more real and current view, but with the purpose of remembering the suffering that the victims went through.

This work was exhibited at the Museo C.A.V. La Neo-Mudejar in Madrid.[6]

Manifesto Público (2019)

This work is grounded in the struggle to eradicate inequality and machismo from society, seeking a reconstruction of women outside of socially patriarchal prejudices and stigmas that have limited them on many levels. Public Manifesto [7] is a work of space appropriation in which the artist seeks to desexualize and naturalize women from the normality of the genitals without resorting to a reproduction attached to reality but by making an explicit social reference. This work has been exhibited in various spaces around the world and has caused various reactions according to the culture and normalization of sexuality in countries such as Cuba, Japan, Spain, Italy, Costa Rica, the United States and South Africa. [4][7]

Books

Joaristi's published works include: [2]

  • Silencios y gritos (2015)
  • The Best of 2016: International Emerging Artists (2016)
  • Entre Siglos: Arte Contemporáneo de Centroamérica y Panamá (2016)
  • Arte Al Límite (2017)
  • The First Berliner Art Book (2017)
  • Important World Artists (2017)
  • Lenguaje Sucio (2019)

References

  1. ^ a b c Joaristi, Aimée (2021). "Biography". Website of Aimée Joaristi.
  2. ^ a b c d e Joaristi, Aimée (2021). "Trajectory". Website of Aimée Joaristi.
  3. ^ a b Vallée, François (2021). "Aimée Joaristi: "No hay mejor obra que la no realizada"" [Aimée Joaristi: "There is no better work than the unrealized one".] (in Spanish). Hypermedia Magazine.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Batet, Janet (2020). "Aimée Joaristi: "Solo el osado podría crear un guion de su propia vida"" [Aimée Joaristi: "Only the daring could create a script of their own life"] (in Spanish). Hypermedia Magazine.
  5. ^ Fleites, Alex (2021). "Aimée Joaristi: "yo soy mi obra"" [Aimée Joaristi: "I am my work"] (in Spanish). Oncubanews.
  6. ^ a b c Joaristi, Aimée (2018). "Three crosses". Website of Aimée Joaristi.
  7. ^ a b Joaristi, Aimée (2019). "Manifiesto Púb(l)ico | Pub(l)ic Manifest". Website Aimée Joaristi.