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Trumpos biografinės datos

  • Works on APS: 1
  • Nationality: Chile
  • Also known as:
    • cecilia vicuña
    • cecilia vicuna bravo
    • cecilia vicuna
  • Top 3 works: Dream: Indians kill the Pope
  • Rodyti daugiau…

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What is Cecilia Vicuña known for primarily?
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Cecilia Vicuña’s work explores themes related to:
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Cecilia Vicuña was exiled from Chile due to:

A Voice of Exile and Ecological Remembrance

Cecilia Vicuña, born in Santiago, Chile, in 1948, is a poet and artist whose oeuvre explores profound themes of language, memory, dissolution, extinction, and exile—concepts inextricably linked to her personal history as a refugee from the violent military coup that ousted Salvador Allende in 1973. Her artistic practice transcends conventional boundaries, integrating poetry, performance, Conceptualism, and textile craft into a singular vision rooted in feminist methodologies and informed by an unwavering engagement with the complexities of Latin American identity. From early explorations of abstraction to monumental fibre art installations—particularly her iconic quipus, knotted strings imbued with symbolic resonance—Vicuña’s work consistently confronts pressing social and ecological concerns, advocating for poetic justice amidst narratives of displacement and environmental degradation.

Growing up in La Florida, nestled within the Maipo Valley, Vicuña inherited a lineage steeped in artistic tradition. Her great-grandmother and grandfather were sculptors—a formative influence that instilled in her an appreciation for materiality and spatial exploration. From 1957 to 1964, she honed her English skills at St Gabriel’s English School, simultaneously cultivating her artistic sensibilities through initial experiments with large abstract paintings crafted in her father's garden studio. Recognizing the importance of formal training, Vicuña enrolled at architecture school at the University of Chile in Santiago but swiftly transitioned to fine arts studies, establishing herself as a sculptor and furthering her artistic education at Slade School of Fine Art, University College London from 1972-1973. These formative experiences shaped her worldview and fueled her commitment to challenging established conventions within the art world.

The Poetics of Fragility and the Precarios

While living in Chile during the mid-1960s, Vicuña began an ongoing series of small sculptures she calls precarios, spatial poems in which she combines feathers, stone, plastic, wood, wire, shells, cloth, and other human-made detritus. These tiny sculptures are often loosely fastened together with string, so the materials appear to have gathered naturally. These works are defined by their fragility and ephemerality; Vicuña initially composed the precarios along the ocean’s edge, so that they would inevitably be erased by the high tide. This practice of creating art destined for disappearance serves as a powerful metaphor for the precarious nature of human existence and the vulnerability of our ecosystems.

As her practice evolved, Vicuña became deeply interested in ancient Andean traditions, particularly the quipu—an ancient method of communication and record-keeping involving the knotting of colored strings. She re-invented this Pre-Columbian system through ritual acts of weaving, creating her own Quipus from unspun wool. These ephemeral, site-specific installations combine the tactile ritual of weaving and spinning with assemblage, poetry, and performance. Through these knotted threads, she seeks to reconstruct a sense of unity and awareness of interconnectivity, bridging the gap between art and poetry as a way of "hearing an ancient silence waiting to be heard."

Legacy of Activism and Global Recognition

Vicuña’s work is never merely aesthetic; it is deeply political and activist in nature. Her practice addresses the most pressing concerns of the modern world, including ecological destruction, human rights, and cultural homogenization. She utilizes what she calls Palabrarmas (word-weapons) to engage with the roots of language and resist the erasure of indigenous knowledge. This commitment to reclaiming ancestral wisdom serves as a talisman against unbridled capitalism and the forces that threaten both the planet and humanity.

Throughout her illustrious career, Vicuña has achieved significant international acclaim, with her work featured in some of the world's most prestigious institutions. Her major achievements include:

  • Solo exhibitions at the Tate Modern in London and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.
  • Recognition of her contributions to contemporary art through showcases at the Museo de Bellas Artes in Santiago and the Whitechapel Gallery.
  • The establishment of a unique artistic vocabulary that merges the boundaries between fine art, literature, and environmental activism.

Today, Cecilia Vicuña remains a vital force in the contemporary art landscape, continuing to use her multidisciplinary approach to advocate for the protection of our shared ecological and cultural heritage.




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