Mexican artist (born 1980)
Pia Camil (born 1980) is a Mexican contemporary artist . Camil works in painting, sculpture, installation and performance.
Pia Camil was born in 1980 in Mexico City , Mexico .[ 1] Camil was raised in Mexico City.
Camil focused on studying painting in her college education.[ 2] She earned a B.F.A. in Painting in 2003 from the Rhode Island School of Design , and an M.F.A. in 2008 from the Slade School of Fine Art , in London.[ 3] [ 4]
Camil’s work is usually associated to the Mexican urban landscape, the aesthetic language of modernism and its relationship to retail and advertising.[ 5] Recently she has engaged in public participation as a way to activate the work and engage with the politics of consumerism.[ 6] [ 7]
Her work is included in many public museum collections including Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum ,[ 6] Centre Pompidou ,[ 6] Blanton Museum of Art ,[ 6] and others.
Pia Camil: Three Works, Museum of Contemporary Art, Tucson , Tucson, Arizona (2021)[ 8]
Telón de Boca , Museo Universitario del Chopo , Mexico City, Mexico, curated by Itzel Vargas. (2018)[ 6]
Fade to Black: Sit, Relax, Look , Savannah College of Art and Design Museum, Savannah, Georgia. (2018)[ 6]
Bara, Bara, Bara , Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, Texas. Curated by Justine Ludwig . (2017)[ 6]
Divisor Pirata , NuMu (Nuevo Museo de Arte Contemporáneo), Guatemala City , Guatemala. (2016)
A Pot for A Latch , second edition, Manetti Shrem Museum of Art at the University of California, Davis , California . (2016)
Slats, Skins & Shopfittings , Blum & Poe , New York City, New York. (2016)
A Pot for A Latch , New Museum , New York City, New York. (2016)
^ "The Clark Art Institute Launches A New Contemporary Art Program With Works by Mexican Artist Pia Camil" . ArtfixDaily . March 7, 2020. Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ Limnander, Armand (December 5, 2018). "The Nine Women Leading Mexico's Cultural Renaissance" . W Magazine . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ "Pia Camil, Mexican performance and multimedia artist" . Encyclopedia Britannica . Retrieved 2019-04-04 .
^ Cepeda, Gaby (2019-04-01). "In the Studio: Pia Camil" . Art in America . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ Radin, Sara (2019-12-03). "Pia Camil turns old T-shirts into art" . i-D . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ a b c d e f g "La artista mexicana, Pia Camil, crea esta impactante obra para la portada de Vogue" [The Mexican artist, Pia Camil, creates the work 'New Beginnings' for Vogue]. Vogue Mexico (in Mexican Spanish). July 2, 2020. Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ Gleichenhaus, Becca (2019-11-05). "An Evening With Pia Camil at the Guggenheim on November 8" . Hyperallergic . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ Regan, Margaret. "Make it sew: MOCA-Tucson features exhibit of reclaimed T-shirts" . Tucson Weekly . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ "Artista mexicano será curador en la Trienal de Aichi 2019" . Centro Urbano (in Spanish). 2019-08-01. Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ "Censorship Was Just One of the Aichi Triennale's Problems. Now, a Government Report Reflects on What Went Wrong" . Artnet News . 2019-12-18. Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ Durón, Maximilíano (2019-10-09). "Following Censorship Allegations, Aichi Triennale Reopens Controversial Exhibition, Puts Back on View Works Removed by Artists" . ARTnews.com . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .
^ Biller, Steven (2019-03-29). "Desert X 2019 Addresses Desert Issues, Conditions With Art Installations" . Palm Springs Life . Retrieved 2021-06-01 .