Martine Gutierrez
Martine Gutierrez | |
---|---|
Born | Berkeley, CA | April 16, 1989
Alma mater | Rhode Island School of Design |
Website | www |
Martine Gutierrez (born Martín Gutierrez,[1][2] April 16, 1989)[3] is an American visual and performance artist. Her work centers around how identity is formed, expressed, and perceived. She has created music videos, billboard campaigns, episodic films, photographs, live performance artworks, and a satirical fashion magazine investigating identity as both a social construct and an authentic expression of self.[4] Martine's work has been exhibited in galleries and museums, notably the Central Pavilion at the 58th Venice Biennale.[5] She portrays Vanesja in Fantasmas on HBO.
Early life and education
[edit]Martine Gutierrez was born April 16, 1989, in Berkeley, California,[3] to a white American mother from upstate New York and a Guatemalan father.[6] She was later raised in Vermont.[7]
Gutierrez received a BFA in printmaking from Rhode Island School of Design in 2012.[8] Following graduation, she moved to New York City.[9]
Exhibitions
[edit]In 2013, Gutierrez had her first solo exhibition at the Ryan Lee Gallery in New York, featuring Real Dolls (2013), a series of photographs depicting her performance of four different life-size sex dolls in various domestic settings, and her multi-part film Martine Part I–X.[8] Images from this series were shown in Disturbing Innocence, a group exhibition curated by Eric Fischl which took place at the FLAG art Foundation in 2014.[10]
Gutierrez's Real Dolls images were also included in the 2015 exhibition About Face at Dartmouth's Hood Museum, which explored how contemporary artists have investigated identity as a culturally constructed phenomenon.[11]
In 2014, Gutierrez created the photographic series Lineups, in which she is dressed and posed to blend seamlessly with groups of glamorous female mannequins staged in highly stylized tableaux.[12] Miss Rosen, who interviewed Martine about LineUps, wrote, "Martine embodies some of the most seductive and alluring images of the feminine, revealing the ways in which the body becomes the work of art itself, ready to be cast in the shape of our ideals."[13]
Gutierrez's 2015 exhibition at Ryan Lee Gallery, Martín Gutierrez: Can She Hear You, included photographs, an installation of disassembled mannequins, paintings, and music videos.[14]
Through experimentation with various artistic techniques and processes, Martine's artworks inspire and ignite a multitude of conversations relating to complex social topics and issues.[citation needed] In a 2018 Vice interview with Gutierrez, Miss Rosen noted:
Gutierrez uses art to explore the intersections of gender, sexuality, race, and class as they inform her life experience. The Brooklyn-based artist uses costume, photography, and film to produce elaborate narrative scenes that combine pop culture tropes, sex dolls, mannequins, and self-portraiture to explore the ways in which identity, like art, is both a social construction and an authentic expression of self.[15]
Gutierrez's artworks were exhibited at 2019 Venice Biennale, curated by Ralph Rugoff.[5] She exhibited photographs from Indigenous Woman including images from her Body En Thrall and Demons series.[16]
In 2019, Gutierrez's work was presented in the solo exhibitions Martine Gutierrez Body en Thrall at the Australian Centre for Photography, Darlinghurst[citation needed] and Life / Like: Photographs, Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, South Hadley.[17] Gutierrez's work was included in Crack Up - Crack Down, Ljubljana Biennial of Graphic Arts curated by Slavs and Tatars;[18] Kiss My Genders, Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre, London, UK;[19] Transamerica/n: Gender, Identity, Appearance Today, McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX;[20] and in Be Seen: Portrait Photography Since Stonewall, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT which explored how artists have used portrait photography to challenge, subvert, and play with societal norms of gender and sexuality.[21]
In 2019, photographs from the Gutierrez's Indigenous Woman series were exhibited in her solo exhibition Focus: Martine Gutierrez, organized by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas.[22] Martine also installed a site-specific 15 ft × 70 ft (4.6m × 22m) mural in the gallery depicting a fanciful colonial landscape.[22]
Artworks, performances, music, and video art
[edit]Martine Part I–X
[edit]Gutierrez's nine-part film Martine Part I–IX (2012–2016) dismantles gender identity through a semi-autobiographical story of her personal transformation. She spent six years creating the work and premiered the final segment in 2016 in her solo exhibition We & Them & Me, at the Contemporary Art Museum, Raleigh, North Carolina.[1] It was also exhibited in her solo exhibition True Story at the Boston University Art Gallery in 2016.[23]
Girlfriends
[edit]Girlfriends (2014) is a series of black-and-white photographs throughout which Martine poses with a single mannequin, creating ambiguous characters within changing realities.[24][better source needed] Composed and shot in upstate New York at the cottage of Gutierrez's grandmother,[25] the photographs depict three different couples, each of whom Gutierrez appears to match with her mannequin counterpart. Her use of mannequins is apparent in Girlfriends, as with many of her artworks. During the mid-1960s, the form of the mannequin experienced an artistic change in which it was used to "…convey a feeling of overwhelming reality, convincing spectators…that they may be standing next to a real person. This illusion would be achieved by suggesting movement through pose and through the display artist's staging of the mannequin in a way that felt 'real'."[26] Commenting on her usage of the medium, Gutierrez emphasizes the idealistic aspect of mannequins.[27]
RedWoman91
[edit]In 2014, Gutierrez's site-specific large-scale video installation RedWoman91 was installed in the windows of Ryan Lee Gallery New York. It featured Gutierrez posing in an "advertising red" jumpsuit, exuding "withering sexual power alternating with hesitant vulnerability" and was positioned to be visible to those walking on the High Line.[28]
#MartineJeans
[edit]#MartineJeans (2016) was a 10 ft × 22 ft (3m × 6.7m) fictional advertisement Gutierrez produced for a billboard at the corner of 37th Street and 9th Avenue in New York City in December 2016.[29][better source needed][30] Completed during her Van Lier Fellowship in residence at ISCP, Gutierrez's public art project was created with support from the New York Community Trust, Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and the New York State Council on the Arts.[29][better source needed] The billboard portraying her topless, wearing only jeans, was designed by Gutierrez to look like a real advertising campaign for a high-end fashion brand with themselves as model.[29][better source needed] Gutierrez's interest in producing a body of work continuing the concept of #MartineJeans evolved into her satirical fashion magazine Indigenous Woman (2018).[30]
Indigenous Woman
[edit]Indigenous Woman (2018) is a 146-page art publication (masquerading as a glossy fashion magazine).[4][6] The art critic Andrea K. Scott wrote of the project, "The [magazine's] front and back covers are clearly modeled on Andy Warhol's Interview, down to the jagged cursive font that spells out the title. Inside, a hundred and forty-six pages are filled with Vogue-worthy fashion spreads—and the ad campaigns that make them possible—featuring Gutierrez playing the roles of an entire agency's worth of models. In addition to posing, Gutierrez also took every picture, styled every outfit, and designed all the layouts."[31] For her FOCUS exhibition, Martine presented photographs from the Indigenous Woman series.[32]
Other works
[edit]Gutierrez's music has been used by Dior and Acne Studios in video editorials, and Saint Laurent set its 2012 resort collection video to her single "Hands Up."[28]
She collaborated with i-D in 2015, co-directing a music video with musician Ssion that stars Gutierrez alongside mannequins dressed in costumes by French designer Simon Porte Jacquemus. The video "The Girl For Me" accompanies music written and produced by Gutierrez.[33]
Beginning as an installation commissioned by Aurora in 2015, Gutierrez produced and performed in collaboration with musician Nomi Ruiz in Origin, a digitally streaming selfie performance simultaneously filmed in front of a live audience.[34] The music, produced by Gutierrez originally written for Ruiz to perform, also titled Origin, was released on iTunes in 2018.[35]
Filmed in Brooklyn, Tulum, Oakland, and Miami, Gutierrez produced and directed the music video Apathy (2018) for her song of the same name.[36]
In 2019 she wrote, produced, and performed in Circle, an immersive live performance series held at Performance Space New York.[37] The sci-fi thriller casts Gutierrez as Eve, an alien held captive by a secret bio weaponry cooperation[dubious – discuss] known as Circle.[38]
Film and television
[edit]Gutierrez has had acting roles in several Julio Torres projects, first as an impaled beauty pageant queen in Los Espookys (2022), then as a gallerist in Problemista (2023), then as Vanesja, a performance artist turned agent in Fantasmas (2024).
Publications and commissions
[edit]Martine's photograph Masking, Starpepper Mask (detail) (2018) from Indigenous Woman (2018) was the January 2019 cover of Artforum.[39]
Gutierrez's photograph Demons, Tlazoteotl, Eater of Filth from Indigenous Woman (2018) was the cover of RISDXYZ, Spring/Summer 2019.[40]
Gutierrez's series Showgirls Of The Mountains was commissioned for Swarovski Book of Dreams, volume 3, 2019, and shows Swarovski crystal jewelry designed by Martine with Michael Schmidt.[41]
A set of self-portraits of Gutierrez titled Xotica created in Tulum Mexico, appeared in Garage, issue 16, 2019.[9]
Interview commissioned Catfight, group portraits of Gutierrez and her friends, print April 2019.[42] The fashion shoot styled by Gutierrez is documented in a behind the scenes video.[citation needed] She commented in Interview:
Magazines and advertising and now, more than ever, social media, are the codes that the next generation is learning from. Being a trans woman of color, it's like, no shade, but don't just invite us in. Give us marginalized folks autonomy over our own image so that we can at least voice our own ideas instead of them being appropriated by the mainstream.[42]
Notable works in public collections
[edit]- Demons, Tlazoteotl 'Eater of Filth' (2018), Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine[43]
- Maria from ANTI-ICON: APOKALYPSIS (2021), McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas[44]
- Clubbing (2012), McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas[44]
- Queer Rage, Don't touch the art (2018), Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, Ohio[45]
- Indigenous Woman (2018), Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, Ohio[45]
Personal life
[edit]While working on her multi-part film Martine Part I–X in 2012, Gutierrez changed her first name to Martine by "[adding] an ‘e’ to the end of my name... same pronunciation, different gender."[1] In 2024, she dropped her last name, going by only her first name.[46]
Gutierrez lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.[9]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Rawley, Lena (2017-02-09). "This Artist Thinks Gender Is a Drag". The Cut. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
I adopted gender neutral pronouns and added an 'e' to the end of my name, previously Martín — same pronunciation, different gender
- ^ "Martin Gutierrez | Metal Magazine". Metal. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
- ^ a b "Martine Gutierrez (born 1989 in Berkeley, CA)". Artnet. Retrieved 2023-10-14.
- ^ a b "A Trans Latinx Artist's Incredible High-Fashion Self-Portraits". www.vice.com. 21 September 2018. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b "Biennale Arte 2019 | Martine Gutierrez". La Biennale di Venezia. 2019-05-13. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b "Art 21 Magazine". August 2019.
- ^ Scott, Andrea K. (2018-10-20). "Martine Gutierrez's "Indigenous Woman": A Trans Latinx Artist's High-Fashion Critique of Colonialism". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
- ^ a b Cotter, Holland (2013-08-01). "Martín Gutierrez: Martin(e)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b c Tourjée, Diana (2019-02-14). "Martine Gutierrez's Self-Portraits Make the Old New Again". Garage. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Disturbing Innocence". The FLAG Art Foundation. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "About Face | Hood Museum". hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu. 23 February 2018. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ Sheets, Hilarie M. (2017-09-15). "Gender-Fluid Artists Come Out of the Gray Zone". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Exhibit | Martine Gutierrez: True Story - Crave Online". Mandatory. 2016-10-25. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Martin Gutierrez". Interview Magazine. 2015-04-22. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ Rosen, Miss (21 September 2018). "A Trans Artist's Incredible High-Fashion Self-Portraits". Vice.com. Vice Media Group, 2018. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
- ^ "The Originals: Martine Gutierrez". W Magazine | Women's Fashion & Celebrity News. 11 October 2019. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Life/Like: Photographs by Martine Gutierrez". Mount Holyoke College Art Museum. 6 October 2018. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ McDermott, Emily. "33rd Ljubljana Biennial of Graphic Arts and The Powerful Language of Satire". Frieze. No. 206. ISSN 0962-0672. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Kiss My Genders". Southbank Centre. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Transamerica/n: Gender, Identity, Appearance Today | McNay Art Museum". Mcnayart. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Be Seen: Portrait Photography Since Stonewall | Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art". Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b "Focus: Martine Gutierrez". www.themodern.org. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Martine Gutierrez Plumbs Perceptions of Identity, Sexuality | BU Today". Boston University. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Girlfriends". M a r t i n e G u t i e r r e z. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
- ^ "Girlfriends (Anita and Marie)". Art+Culture Projects. 26 July 2016. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
- ^ Schneider, Sara K. (1997). "Body Design, Variable Realisms: The Case of Female Fashion Mannequins". Design Issues. 13 (3): 5–18. doi:10.2307/1511936. ISSN 0747-9360. JSTOR 1511936.
- ^ Rosen, Miss (2019-04-30). "Fashioning the Feminine Ideal in the Photos of Martine Gutierrez". Feature Shoot. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
- ^ a b Inglese, Elizabeth (10 July 2014). "Martín Gutierrez's Exhibitionist New Art". Vogue. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b c "Martine Gutierrez: Jeans". iscp-nyc.org. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b Brammer, John Paul (5 September 2018). "A Trans Latinx Woman Takes Total Control of Her Narrative in New Magazine Art Project". them. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ Scott, Andrea K. (20 October 2018). "Martine Gutierrez's "Indigenous Woman": A Trans Latinx Artist's High-Fashion Critique of Colonialism". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Focus: Martine Gutierrez". the modern.org. Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
- ^ "watch performance artist martin gutierrez's mannequin loving new video". i-D. 2015-04-09. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Aurora // The One-Night Event That Transformed the Dallas Arts District". Berlin Art Link. 2015-11-06. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Multimedia Artist Martine Gutierrez Gets Trap-Y with Her New Single "Origin"". www.lofficielusa.com. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Devan Diaz on Martine Gutierrez's "Apathy"". Artforum. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Circle | Performance Space New York". 6 August 2019. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Martine Gutierrez Plays a Humanoid in New Sci-Fi Show". PAPER. 2019-11-19. Retrieved 2020-07-21.[failed verification]
- ^ "Project: Martine Gutierrez". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "RISD XYZ Spring/Summer 2019". Issuu. 3 June 2019. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ Sidell, Misty White (2019-09-07). "Swarovski Taps Raúl de Nieves, Martine Gutierrez For Art Book". WWD. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b "Artist Martine Gutierrez Pays Homage to New York City's Claws-Out Spirit". Interview. 2019-04-09. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ "Objects: Quick Search has martine and gutierrez (Bowdoin College Museum of Art)". artmuseum.bowdoin.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- ^ a b "Collections Search: Martine Guiterrez". mcnayart.org. Retrieved 2023-12-01.
- ^ a b "Search Martine Gutierrez (Objects) – Search – Allen Memorial Art Museum". allenartcollection.oberlin.edu. Retrieved 2024-04-27.
- ^ Walker, Harron (2024-06-20). "Martine's Latest Performance? Hollywood Actor". The Cut. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
External links
[edit]- 21st-century American artists
- American contemporary artists
- American women performance artists
- American people of Guatemalan descent
- American performance artists
- Artists from Berkeley, California
- 1989 births
- Living people
- Transgender women artists
- Transgender photographers
- 21st-century American photographers
- 21st-century American women photographers
- Rhode Island School of Design alumni
- Hispanic and Latino American artists
- Hispanic and Latino American women in the arts
- American transgender artists
- LGBTQ Hispanic and Latino American people