Project Tag: Kukuli Velarde

2022 INTERNATIONAL CERAMIC ART FAIR (ICAF)

2022 INTERNATIONAL CERAMIC ART FAIR (ICAF)

2022 INTERNATIONAL CERAMIC ART FAIR

Gardiner Museum
Toronto, Ontario

June 9 – 19, 2022

Featuring work by Cristina CĂłrdova, Sergei Isupov, Mara Superior, and Kukuli Velarde


Virtual Artist Talk with Cristina CĂłrdova

June 17th, 1-2pm EST
see more details below

The International Ceramic Art Fair (ICAF) makes its highly anticipated return to the Gardiner Museum, featuring works by emerging and established ceramic artists from a wide range of backgrounds, and an exciting slate of online and in-person programming.

ICAF 2022 celebrates connections between body, identity, and land. Global mythologies have long connected the human body to the earth, from a Nubian deity fashioning humans from clay to scientific explorations of clay as the first carrier of life. The human body is symbolically if not literally connected to clay, helping us understand who we are as individuals, a society, and a species.

Contemporary ceramics has become one of the most dynamic areas of artistic practice in recent years. So it is with much excitement that we invite collectors and curators from around the world to join us for the International Ceramic Art Fair, which has grown to a 10-day celebration of contemporary art, gallery tours, artist talks, performances, and more. Join us in person and online to discover how some of the top galleries and artists are approaching the themes of body, figuration, and the land. We look forward to sharing the diversity, complexity, and accessibility of contemporary ceramics.
– Sequoia Miller, Chief Curator

This year’s Honorary Patron is internationally renowned Kenyan-born British studio potter, Magdalene Odundo.

READ THE PRESS RELEASE

EVENTS


Virtual Artist Talk with Cristina CĂłrdova

June 17th, 1-2pm EST

As part of the International Ceramic Art Fair, join featured artist Cristina CĂłrdova for an online discussion about her work. CĂłrdova creates figurative compositions that examine our shared humanity and question socio-cultural notions of gender, race, and beauty. Registration is free.

Register now

Full event schedule for ICAF 2022

Virtual Curator Talk with Maya Wilson-Sanchez

June 14th, 1-2pm EST

As part of the International Ceramic Art Fair, join Gardiner Museum Curatorial Resident Maya Wilson-Sanchez for a virtual conversation about the work of Kukuli Velarde, a Peruvian-American artist who specializes in painting and ceramic sculptures made out of clay and terracotta. Registration is free.

Register now

Full event schedule for ICAF 2022

FEATURED ARTISTS IN THE EXHIBITION


MAKING PLACE MATTER | The Clay Studio

MAKING PLACE MATTER | The Clay Studio

April 23, 2022 – October 2, 2023


THE CLAY STUDIO

Philadelphia, PA

Featuring Work by Kukuli Velarde

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


Making Place Matter is an ambitious and experimental exhibition, symposium, and publication that will accompany the opening of The Clay Studio’s newly built home located in Philadelphia’s Kensington neighborhood at 1425 North American Street. On April 8, The Clay Studio will enter into a new chapter of its nearly 50-year history, with the concept of ‘place’ taking on critical importance as the organization grows into its new home. Larger classrooms, state-of-the-art studios, an outdoor sculpture garden, a rooftop event space, and luminous new gallery spaces will meet the increased demand from students, artists, and visitors. Just as significant, building a resonant conversation between clay, artists, and audiences in the new Jill Bonovitz Gallery, Making Place Matter is organized around the complex meanings of place in our contemporary social conversation. The exhibition will open on April 23 and run through October 2, 2022, and is free to the public.

Using clay and cultural heritage as sources of inspiration, Making Place Matter will feature Philadelphia-based, Peruvian-born artist Kukuli Velarde, American-born, Massachusetts-based artist Molly Hatch, and Egyptian American artist Ibrahim Said, now based in North Carolina. Each artist explores the idea of place with regard to personal history, cultural heritage, and social justice. Clay is the material embodiment of place. Made of the earth we stand on, clay has the capacity to articulate cultural perspectives, social engagement, and artistic intentions. By using clay as a means to investigate ideas of place, Making Place Matter will create powerful tools to share with the new and established community, creating a feeling of belonging within the Jill Bonovitz Gallery for The Clay Studio’s various constituencies.

ABOUT THE A MI VIDA PROJECT


Kukuli Velarde’s A Mi Vida project includes a sculptural installation, painting, performance, and off-site interventions. The series focuses on the artist’s desire to prolong the sensation of holding her now elementary-age daughter Vida in her arms as a baby. It also embodies her anguish at the family separation at the U.S. – Mexico border. Like many of Velarde’s works, these clay sculptures entangle reality and dreamscape, blending influences from contemporary life and ancient indigenous Peruvian imagery and patterning.

FEATURED ARTIST IN THE EXHIBITION


KUKULI VELARDE

Kukuli Velarde is a Peruvian-American artist who specializes in painting and ceramic sculptures made out of clay and terra-cotta. Velarde focuses on the themes of gender and the consequences of colonization in Latin American contemporary culture. Her ceramic work is a visual investigation of aesthetics, cultural survival, and inheritance.

Velarde has had multiple solo exhibitions, most recently including Kukuli Velarde: The Complicit Eye at Taller Puertorriqueño (Philadelphia, PA), Kukuli Velarde at AMOCA (Pomona, CA), and Plunder Me, Baby at Peters Project Gallery (Santa Fe, NM). Her work may also be found in numerous public institutions, including the Museum of Fine Arts (Houston, TX), the John Michael Kohler Arts Center (Sheboygan, WI), and the Museo de Art Contemporaneo de Lima, (Lima, Peru).

Velarde is the recipient of numerous grants, including a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant, a United States Artists Knight Fellowship, and a PEW Fellowship in Visual Art. She was awarded the Grand Prize for her work exhibited at the Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale in Icheon, South Korea. Velarde holds a BFA (magna cum laude) from Hunter College of the University of New York. Velarde lives and works in Philadelphia, PA.

VIEW MORE ON KUKULI

INQUIRE ‱  HERE  ‱

Kukuli Velarde, “A Mi Vida III”, 2017, earthenware underglaze, paint, resin, 24 x 10 x 6″

MORE ON THE CLAY STUDIO


THE CLAY STUDIO


1425 N American Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122

 

The Clay Studio is a nonprofit arts organization with internationally renowned artist residency programs, classes and events, exhibitions, community engagement programs, a shop, and more. They serve as a place where established and emerging artists come to shape their careers, a vital resource for arts education at local schools and community organizations, and a destination where people from every neighborhood in Philadelphia and all over the world can explore the vast world of clay. Visit theclaystudio.org for more information.

EVENTS


Making Place Matter Symposium

Saturday, June 4th | 9am – 5pm

Buy tickets here

IN DIALOGUE: Cristina CĂłrdova & Kukuli Velarde

IN DIALOGUE: Cristina CĂłrdova & Kukuli Velarde

October 16 to December 30, 2021

Public Reception 4 to 5:30 pm
4:30 Conversation with artist, Kukuli Velarde

FERRIN CONTEMPORARY
1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams MA

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


North Adams,  MA

Ferrin Contemporary presents IN DIALOGUE: Cristina CĂłrdova & Kukuli Velarde. The two artists share several overlapping identities as Latina sculptors working in the figural tradition. Each explores subjects drawn from both their cultural histories and their roles as mothers, daughters and parents of young women documenting their own and their subjects’ generational changes. This exhibition opens simultaneously with MASS MoCA’s Ceramics in The Expanded Field, curated by Senior Curator Susan Cross. 

The newest works in the exhibition were produced in 2021 during the pandemic when each artist could focus deeply on major works, uninterrupted by travel; to-date, Velarde’s painting and Cordova’s sculpture may be some of these artists most important and large-scale works.

October 16 – December 30, 2021


AT FERRIN CONTEMPORARY | North Adams, MA

Exhibition catalog for IN DIALOGUE: Cristina Cordova & Kukuli Velarde at Ferrin Contemporary, Oct. 16 to Dec. 30, 2021. With luscious photos and detailed artist statements, this catalog gives depth and insight into the motivations behind the exhibition and the artworks therein.

  • October 16 to December 30, 2021 at Ferrin Contemporary, curated by Leslie Ferrin
  • Catalog features detailed artist statements
  • Published on 

EVENTS

October 16, 4:30pm: Conversation with artist Kukuli Velarde

PRESS

Berkshire Eagle
11.05.21 IN DIALOGUE: Latina artists use clay, female form to explore personal, generational, and cultural identity 

Rural Intelligence Recommends
10.16.21 Ferrin Contemporary: Cristina CĂłrdova and Kukuli Velarde

Berkshire Eagle 
10.15.21 BE mentions Ferrin Contemporary in coverage of MASS MoCA’s CERAMICS IN THE EXPANDED FIELD exhibition

KUKULI VELARDE

KUKULI VELARDE

Featured in Making Place Matter at The Clay Studio in Philadelphia, PA through October 2nd, 2022



ISICHAPUITU SERIES













Peruvian-American, b. 1962, Lima, Peru
lives and works in Philadelphia, PA

Kukuli Velarde is a Peruvian-American artist who specializes in painting and ceramic sculptures made out of clay and terra-cotta. Velarde focuses on the themes of gender and the consequences of colonization in Latin American contemporary culture. Her ceramic work is a visual investigation of aesthetics, cultural survival, and inheritance.

Velarde has had multiple solo exhibitions, most recently including Kukuli Velarde: The Complicit Eye at Taller Puertorriqueño (Philadelphia, PA), Kukuli Velarde at AMOCA (Pomona, CA), and Plunder Me, Baby at Peters Project Gallery (Santa Fe, NM). Her work may also be found in numerous public institutions, including the Museum of Fine Arts (Houston, TX), the John Michael Kohler Arts Center (Sheboygan, WI), and the Museo de Art Contemporaneo de Lima, (Lima, Peru).

Velarde is the recipient of numerous grants, including a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant, a United States Artists Knight Fellowship, and a PEW Fellowship in Visual Art. She was awarded the Grand Prize for her work exhibited at the Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale in Icheon, South Korea. Velarde holds a BFA (magna cum laude) from Hunter College of the University of New York. Velarde lives and works in Philadelphia, PA.

ON HER WORK

I am a Peruvian-American artist. My work, which revolves around the consequences of colonization in Latin American contemporary culture, is a visual investigation about aesthetics, cultural survival, and inheritance. I focus on Latin American history, particularly that of PerĂș, because it is the reality with which I am familiar. I do so, convinced that its complexity has universal characteristics and any conclusion can be understood beyond the frame of its uniqueness.

Kukuli Velarde, “I Speak Spanish, Yo Hablo InglĂ©s”, 2021, oil on stretched canvas and wood panel substrate, mounted on 7 aluminum panels, 96 x 96″.

ON I Speak Spanish, Yo Hablo Inglés

I Speak Spanish, Yo Hablo InglĂ©s is an intersectional feminist work dealing with themes of America, immigration and the Latin diaspora, femininity, and motherhood. Velarde wanted to make a painting to summon her personal experience as an immigrant while also honoring Indigenous peoples of the land now known as the United States of America. Expressing the myriad realities and experiences of vast diasporas led to a deeply layered and symbolic work. “You have an idea of what America is which, in many ways, is not the America you encounter” says Velarde, who stresses that she chose to leave her native Peru. “I was never pursuing ‘the American dream.’ I’m an immigrant by choice but I can certainly imagine what it’s like for many people who do have to flee or escape.”

The painting is multilayered. The most obvious and recognizable iconography is the American flag behind a female body with multiple faces. The red stripes imply a history beyond the Declaration of Independence. The white stripes include the pattern of Lenni Lenape wampum belts. The Lenni Lenape people are from Lenapehoking, their expansive historical territory that included present-day northeastern Delaware, New York City, Western Long Island, the Lower Hudson Valley, New Jersey, and eastern Pennsylvania along the Delaware River Watershed. Velarde now lives in Philadelphia. It’s believed the Lenni Lenape offered these traditional belts to William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, as a peace treaty between Penn and Tamanend, a chief of the Lenni Lenape in 1683. “The flowers in the red stripes have always been here, regardless of humans. They are indigenous to the land,” says Velarde, referring the flowers found within the flag. “Further, the flag is fenced off as a reference to the difficulties of achieving ‘the dream’—there’s always an obstacle to achieve it, real or imaginary. And the fence become such a symbol in the Trump era, which is part of what provoked this painting,” says Velarde.

Velarde remembers seeing a four-faced, back forward figure in a church in her mother’s hometown of Huaro, Peru. It was painted in the colonial era by Teofilo Benavente. 

Velarde’s figure is also four-faced and rear-presenting. First, it’s Velarde’s way of blocking objectification and refusing common narratives about the female body. One of the four faces is backwards, hidden from the public and looking at the flag and at history. Velarde’s figure is looking out toward America, and at the same time side-to-side and behind, as an attitude of awareness to her surroundings. All of this is painted as an almost-but-not-quite-Vitruvian-meets-the-crucified-Christ-woman to comment on the the cultural expectations of femme and female bodies in a culture that prescribes a paradigm that people cannot fulfill. “With these ideas of universal human aesthetics, nobody can achieve that and we all become ugly. It’s a commentary on erasure,” Velarde elaborates.

Finally, the female character, half superhero/half saint, is talking to the audience loud and clear, in a spiral of ribbons that signify speech. She is speaking English and Spanish to anybody who cares to listen/read, and is defending her rights to be herself within a social environment that has become toxic and dangerous for diversity and community. “What is her power?,” asks Velarde. “Perhaps her only power is not to allow others to silence her, to keep going—to exist and resist.”

_ _ _
For more on the Lenni Lenape, wampum belts, and the Penn treaty please visit our source: Native American Heritage Month: Penn Treaty Wampum Belts, by Richard Naples, November 23, 2016.

Kukuli Velarde “ISICHAPUITU” figure installation during IN DIALOGUE two-person exhibition with Cristina Cordova, Oct. 16 – Dec. 31 2021

ON ISICHAPUITU, 1997-2006

An oral tradition from Cusco, PerĂș tells the story of a priest who was wildly in love with a woman who died. In his despair, he procured a “vessel of death” for summoning her spirit, and loved her one more time. The “vessels of death,” known as Manchaypuitu (male) and Isichapuitu (female), were human-like vessels known to be powerful tools for bringing the spirits from the past.

Kukuli Velarde created 74 Isichapuitu vessels between 1997-2006. Each of the figures responds to a very different need, as delineated by Velarde in her series statement: 

I feel my body populated by memories, impressions, beliefs, fears and desires. They are imprinted deeply, almost etched. They follow me, tormenting me, or sweetening my path. At the stage of my life when I created Isichapuitu, I wanted to summon their presence, thank them for being, and make peace with each of these emotions and memories. I didn’t know how, until I saw a photograph of a Mexican statue from the Rockefeller Collection at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. The figure was two thousand years old and represented an obese male child with his arms up.  Somebody made it two thousand years ago, and yet I believe, it looks like me.     

It is said that every work of art is a self-portrait. I imagine the Huastecan artist modeling the clay, giving it his or her eyes, his or her full cheeks, his or her protruding upper jaw. I imagine him or her looking like me, and then, I imagine myself making the Huastecan piece two thousand years ago. I believe I am continuing something I began long ago. I am remaking it over and over, as if I don’t want to depart from it, as if it were possible to prolong the moment of creation and continue an eternal labor of love. 

My figures are different organs of a single body presented on the floor, next to each other, as a metaphor of wholeness. Each of us are the sum of viscera and flesh, expectations and disappointments, memories and oblivion, generosities and pettiness. They go on the floor because I want them invading our realm. They go next to each other, because they were not created to be observed and qualified as objects. Their value lies not in my skills but in their mere existence. They exist, first for me, and then for everybody else. The Isichapuitu installation is an exorcism, but it is also a farewell, and a new beginning.

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

videos featuring Kukuli Velarde 

 

 

Artist Kukuli Velarde’s series Corpus, composed of sculptures and embroidered banners, evokes ritual procession mixed with cultural influences that reflect her contemporary perspective. The artist investigates aesthetics, cultural survival, and inheritance specifically in terms of Latin American history, reinterpreting them through her own postcolonial and feminist lens.

In this talk, Velarde considers the influences on this body of work as well as her multimedia artistic practice with curator Elisabeth Agro. Velarde’s work was part of the exhibition New Grit: Art & Philly Now at the Philadelphia Museum of Art May 7 – August 22, 2021.

In the Artist's Voice: Kukuli Velarde presented by the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Kukuli Velarde on The Potters Cast

The podcast from May 2019 is a follow-up to her NCECA demonstration and an overall discussion about her work and history. Follow the link to the right to listen and read their additional Q&A about her works.