Regina_José_Galindo

Regina José Galindo

Regina José Galindo

Guatemalan performance artist


Regina José Galindo (born August 27, 1974 Guatemala City)[1][2] is a Guatemalan performance artist who specializes in performance art. She is currently one of the main artists working in this media in Latino America. She is also a poet. Her work is characterized by her explicit political and critical content, using her body as a tool for confrontation and social transformation. She received the Golden Lion as best young artists in the Venice Biennale in 2005 and the Prince Clause Prize in 2011.

Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...

Biography

Galindo was born in Guatemala City in 1974, where she lives and works. Her artistic career is framed by the Guatemalan civil war that occurred from 1960 and 1996. This conflict was marked by genocide with more than 200,000 victims, many of them indigenous, agricultural workers, women and girls. [3]

" I have only lived in Guatemala with a great violence problem, specially a limitless gender violence. During the armed conflict, the damaged to the female population was part of the war strategy to induce terror in the population, because when you kill a woman you also kill the chance for life. Currently, and since a few years ago, this is part of Guatemalan reality, but in higher numbers. Every day women are killed in brutal ways. Generally the bodies of men appear beheaded, or with a shot on the head, stabbed, or asphyxiated. But women bodies show evidence of rape and torture before being killed Regina José Galindo, 2007. [4]

Early work

Remarkably, for an artist who is known for the political themes of her work, Galindo grew up in a lower middle class household where politics generally, and the Guatemalan civil war more specifically, were not discussed. She attended secretarial school but her career as a secretary was not a successful one.[5] Her work as a poet developed through attending workshops and groups which met in friends' houses, at which time she wrote the pieces that became part of her book Personal and Intransmisible.

Galindo started her professional career working in advertisement, according to her this helped her make better connections between images and words.[6]

Her first steps in the artistic world where linked to poetry and drawing, getting close to the contemporary art world with other artists, especially Jessica Lagunas[7] and Maria Adela Díaz. Aníbal López (also known as A-1 53167) has been a good friend for Galindo, and is noted as an important influence on her work.[8].[8]

She specialized in the use of performance art starting with one of her first works "Lo voy a guitar al viento" (I will yell it to the wind) in 1999[9]. Her own body becomes the protagonist of her work, when she hangs herself from a bridge in Guatemala while reciting her poetry to denounce the atrocities inflicted on women under the abuse of political power.[10]

With her work, Galindo has spoken up against violence, machismo (toxic masculinity) and one of the main topics is femicide, occidental beauty canon, state violence, and abuse of power, specially in the context of her country, even tough her language relates to other contexts. [11]

In her earlier work she used her body exclusively, sometimes subjecting herself to extreme situations and her interaction with volunteers or hired people that take the action beyond her control. Such as the work Himenoplastia (2004) where she went under hymen reconstruction surgery. [12]

Performances

She first gave two performances in Guatemala in 1999, and gained international fame. One of her well-known acts include ¿Quién Puede Borrar las Huellas? (Translated: "Who Can Erase the Traces"), from 2003, in which she walked from the Congress of Guatemala building to the National Palace, dipping her bare feet at intervals in a white basin full of human blood as a vigorous protest against the presidential candidacy of Guatemala’s former dictator José Efraín Ríos Montt.[13]

Another of her notable works was titled Perra (2005), in which she carved the Spanish word perra, or bitch, on her legs, in protest against violence against women.[14]

She frequently collaborates with other art performers, including compatriot Aníbal López.

List of solo exhibitions

More information Date(s), Exhibition title ...

List of group exhibitions

In October 2008, Galindo exhibited alongside renowned artists like Tania Bruguera and Jimmie Durham at MoMA PS1 for NeoHooDoo: Art for a Forgotten Faith, an exhibition co-organized by The Menil Collection.[22]

Between March 25 and June 8, 2014, Padiglione d'Arte Contemporanea (PAC) exhibited a selection of Galindo's work in Estoy Viva. The show was divided in five sections: Politics, Woman, Violence, Organic and Death. Works such as ¿Quién puede borrar las huellas? (Who can erase the traces?, 2003), Himenoplastia (2004), Mientras, ellos siguen libres (While they are still free, 2007) and Caparazon (Shell, 2010) were presented alongside newer works that had not been exhibited before in Italy.[23]

In January 2020, Galindo was part of Artpace’s exhibit titled Visibilities: Intrepid Women of Artpace.[24][25] Curated by Erin K. Murphy, Visibilities not only kicks off the nonprofit's 25th anniversary celebration, but also highlights past artists from their International Artist-in-Residency program, such as Galindo who was a resident in Spring 2008.[26] In Visibilities, a video that Galindo created during the 2008 residency is being showcased at Artpace for the first time.[24]

Recognition

Galindo received the Golden Lion award at the Venice Biennale in 2005, in the category of “artists under 30”, for her video Himenoplastia.[27] This work, nevertheless, got a particularly hostile reception during its first showing in Guatemala, in 2004. The controversial work depicted surgical reconstruction of the artist’s hymen.[28]

In October 2009, Exit Art showed a solo exhibition of Galindo's work as part of their SOLO series and Performance in Crisis program.[29]

A book on Galindo’s performance work has been published in Italy (Vanilla Edizioni, 2006). Galindo is also a writer of poetry and narrative; in 1998 she received the Myrna Mack Foundation's Premio Unico de Poesía in Guatemala for Personal e intransmisible (Scripta Coloquia, 2000).

In 2011 the jury of the 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts in Ljubljana (Dave Beech, Christian Höller, Urška Jurman, and Ulay /Frank Uwe Laysiepen/) awarded her with the Grand Prize for the works: Confesión (Confession), 2007 which was produced in Spain and inspired by the extraordinary rendition flights uncovered by a team of local reporters in Palma de Mallorca, and the Prince Claus Awards.[30]

List of works

More information Year, Performance ...

See also

Bibliography

  • Cazali, Rosina, and Fernando Castro Florez. Regina José Galindo. Milan: Silvana Editoriale, 2011. Print.
  • Díaz, Tamara, and Virginia Pérez-Ratton. "Regina Galindo: Toque De Queda (2005), Perra (2005), Un Espejo Para La Pequeña Muerte (2006)." Estrecho Dudoso. Costa Rica: TEOR/éTica, 2006. 60-61. Print.
  • Sileo, Diego, and Eugenio Viola. Regina José Galindo: Estoy Viva. Milan: Skira, 2014. Print.
  • Siviero, Viviana, and Marco Scotini. Regina José Galindo. Albissola Marina: Vanillaedizioni, 2006. Print.
  • Villena Fiengo, Sergio, Regina José Galindo. El performance como acto de resistencia. Revista Centroamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Vol. VII, nº 1, 2010, https://www.academia.edu/3465907/Regina_Galindo._El_performance_como_acto_de_resistencia
  • Villena Fiengo, Sergio, "Intervenciones intempestivas en Centro América. El anti-ceremonial público en la obra de Regina Galindo", Revista de Estudios Globales & Arte Contemporáneo, Vol. 3, nº 1, 2015, https://www.academia.edu/26755279/EL_ANTI-CEREMONIAL_PÚBLICO_EN_LA_OBRA_DE_REGINA_JOSÉ_GALINDO_2016_

References

  1. "Regina José Galindo". www.guggenheim.org. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  2. "Regina José Galindo". Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  3. Trinidad, Emma (2018-04-20). "PAC | Woman Art House: Regina José Galindo". PAC (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  4. "El Peso del Dolor, Entrevista a Regina José Galindo". Escáner Cultural (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  5. Savorelli, Livia (2006). Regina José Galindo. Albissola Marina: Vanillaedizioni. pp. 24–25. ISBN 8860570093.
  6. Hernández, Hortensia (2017-05-01). "Regina José Galindo". La Opinión de Zamora (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  7. "No soy paz, soy guerra". Plaza Pública (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  8. Savorelli, Livia (2006). Regina José Galindo. Albissola Marina: Vanillaedition. pp. 22–23. ISBN 8860570093.
  9. "Regina José Galindo". catalogo.artium.eus. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  10. Mayordomo, Concha (2017-05-15). "Mujeres en el arte: Regina José Galindo". Tribuna Feminista (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  11. Sierra, Yolanda Peralta (2016-04-02). "Conversación con Regina José Galindo". puntadas subversivas (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  12. Fernando Sabido Sánchez, ed. (23 August 2012). "Regina José Galindo". Poetas Siglo XXI - Antologia Mundial + 20.000 Poetas. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  13. Regina José Galindo Francisco Goldman
  14. "Regina José Galindo La Sombra (The Shadow)". Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  15. "Regina José Galindo SOS". Prometeogallery. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  16. "Regina José Galindo El Objetivo". Proyectos Ultravioleta. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  17. "Regina José Galindo Mazorca". Prometeogallery. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  18. "Regina José Galindo Bearing Witness". Davidson College Art Galleries. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  19. Newman, Lia; Kidder, Jeffrey; Cornejo, Kency (2015). Regina José Galindo: Bearing Witness/Dar testimonio. Van Every/Smith Galleries, Davidson College. ISBN 9781890573171.
  20. "NeoHooDoo: Art for a Forgotten Faith". MoMA PS1. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  21. "Regina José Galindo Estoy Viva". PAC. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  22. Martin, Deborah (2020-01-10). "Artpace in San Antonio devoting 25th anniversary to works by women". ExpressNews.com. Retrieved 2020-05-23.
  23. "International Artist-In-Residence » Artpace". artpace.org. Retrieved 2020-05-23.
  24. Micchelli, Thomas (November 2009). "Regina José Galindo". The Brooklyn Rail.
  25. "Prince Claus Awards". Prince Claus Fund for Culture and Development. Retrieved 2012-11-05.
  26. Roldán, Ingrid (August 28, 1999). "Singular recital." Prensa Libre. Retrieved 2015-12-03.

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