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Rebeca Méndez

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Rebeca Méndez
Rebeca Mendez filming Ascent of Weavers in Oaxaca, 2018
BornJune 8, 1962
Alma materArt Center College of Design
Awards2017 Medal of A.I.G.A.
Websitewww.rebecamendez.com

Rebeca Méndez (June 8, 1962; Mexico City) is a Mexican-American artist and graphic designer. She is a professor at UCLA Design Media Arts in Los Angeles, California,[1] and since July 2020 is chair of the department, as well as founder and director of the Counterforce Lab. Her Vice-chair Peter Lunenfeld wrote about her: "Rebeca has won the three most significant awards in the field of design: The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award in Communication Design, 2012, the AIGA Medal in 2017, and induction to the One Club Hall of Fame in 2017. This triple crown would be worthy enough on its own, more than worthy, absolutely exceptional, but when you add in that Rebeca is the first and only Latina to win each one of these, much less all three, the achievement is towering." In fact, she is the only woman ever to have received all these three awards, while Bob Greenberg from R/GA is the only man to have received all of them[citation needed].

Margaret Andersen, in the biography she wrote when Méndez was awarded the AIGA Medal, notes that Méndez has worked across various cultural and professional domains. Andersen highlights Méndez's ability to contribute to both design and art, as evidenced by her roles in art galleries, advertising agencies, and university classrooms, which reflect the range of her expertise."[2]

Early life and education

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Rebeca Méndez was born June 8, 1962, in Mexico City,[3] Mexico.[4] Her parents were both chemical engineers who she always saw investigating, experimenting and proving their work, which she has credited as inspiring the process for her art work.[2] One of Méndez's first designs was in her parents' home, where they allowed her to paint whatever she desired on the largest wall in their home.[5] At the age of six Méndez began training as a gymnast, at ten she joined the Junior National Olympics Gymnastics team,[6] and in 1979 she was the national champion of Mexico and on the team that was going to go to the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. Then Russia invaded Afghanistan in December 1979. The United States boycotted the Olympics and Mexico did the same thing, which prevented her from becoming an Olympian.[7] She relocated to the United States at 18 with the support and encouragement of her father and in 1984 received her BFA in Communication Design from ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, California. In 1989 she returned to Art Center as Designer of the College, and later its Design Director, a position she held until 1995.[2] Méndez went on to earn her MFA in Media Design Practices from the same college in 1997.[8][5][1]

On December 20, 2019, she was bestowed with the honorary degree of Doctor of Fine Arts by her alma mater, ArtCenter College of Design, which honors her as an artist and designer who is able to include great skill and innovation, think in new ways, and move the social and cultural needle.[9] In his introductory words the college's president Lorne Buchman spoke about the role artists and designers must play in the mess of a world they are inheriting, referring to a podcast interview he conducted with her earlier in the year: "One of the most meaningful conversations I've had in my life on the topic of creativity was with the incomparable Rebeca Méndez. She expressed what I am trying to convey in a far more eloquent way. 'We can get out of this mess we're in,' she said, 'If we rage with love."[10] Before Méndez gave her commencement speech, Stephen Nowlin, director of the school's Alyce de Roulet Williamson Gallery, introduced her with the following words: "Good art and design embody qualities that include great skill and innovation, are pleasing to the eye, grab the heart and elegantly meet a need or solve a problem. But, really good art and design is all that and more. Really good art and design incites a profound kind of mischief. Really good art and design is disagreeable and quarrelsome with what is doctrinaire. It's subversive on how it overturns past assumptions, attacks clichés, dismisses good taste. It forges new vocabularies and rouses unexpected pathways of thinking. Really good art and design creates change and moves the social and cultural needle. Today we get to honor a really good artist and designer, Rebeca Méndez."

Art and themes

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Rebeca Méndez's work mostly involves photography, video, 16mm film, typography, cartography, and architecture.[5] She explores the nature of perception and media representation, specifically how cultures express themselves through the style of nature that they produce at a given time and the medium through which they construct this nature.[11] Her artwork has been credited as making Méndez a strong asset to the fight against prejudice against women and intolerance due to her focus on women in society.[2]

Her art and design work has been exhibited and collected by institutions such as the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, Jose Luis Cuevas Museum in Mexico City, El Paso Museum of Art and the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum in New York.[4] Her work has been featured in media such as The Los Angeles Times,[12] The New Yorker[13] and Graphis Magazine.[14]

Méndez is the founder and director of the CounterForce Lab, a research and fieldwork studio that harnesses the power of art and design to engage with the reality of global ecological crisis and its ties to environmental injustice. Counterforce lab is a collection of artists, designers, scientists, and thinkers working in trans-disciplinary collaboration to create new theoretical frameworks based on artistic fieldwork practices, in co-creation with community partners. Their use of art and design as vehicles for storytelling is central to their belief that mitigating ecological crisis requires a fundamental shift in how we understand ourselves in relation to each other and our place in the natural world.

Career

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In 1992 the silk-screen poster Exceso de Identidad [15] by Rebeca Méndez was part of an international invitational collection of forty posters commissioned by the second International Biennial of the Poster, held in Mexico City, under the theme "America Now, 500 years later.' Her poster explores identity issues, and features her own torso which represents the individual in both its strength and its vulnerability. Méndez attempted to dilute the celebration of Columbus's so-called "conquest" of the New World by reducing his ship to a decorative wallpaper element; the faint silhouette of the poodle serves as an example of how species ownership limits, traps and distorts identity.[16]

Since 1996 Méndez has run a private practice with her writer husband Adam Eeuwens.[17] Rebeca Méndez Studio specializes in work with cultural and socially-oriented clients, designing books on Bill Viola for the Whitney Museum[18][19] and the Deutsche Guggenheim;[20][21] books with curator Alma Ruiz for MoCA;[22][23] projects with architects such as Thom Mayne/Morphosis,[24][25][26] Frank Gehry and Greg Lynn; with the Swedish activist documentary maker Fredrik Gertten[27][28] and with Danish director Pernille Rose Grønkjær;[29] with director Mike Figgis;[30] visionary Bob Stein;[31] author Ashton Applewhite;[32] design theorist Benjamin H. Bratton,[33][34] photographer Iwan Baan[22][35] and musician Ben Frost,[36][37] among others.

In 1997 Méndez was brought in by Tony Arefin as a freelance art director for Wieden+Kennedy in Portland, Oregon, working on the Microsoft account, including a concept for Microsoft Store.[38] Again introduced by Arefin, in 1999 she began working as the creative director at Ogilvy & Mather in New York, first on the IBM account with Chris Wall,[39][40] then with Brian Collins[41] at Brand Integration Group (BIG), who then asked her to set up and lead a BIG studio at Ogilvy in Los Angeles, a position she held until 2003.[42] She worked on global brand identity projects for clients such as IBM,[43] Motorola,[44] Trend Micro,[45] The One Club[46] and Mattel.[47]

In 1998 her design work was recognized with the solo exhibition Rebeca Méndez: Selections from the Permanent Collection of Architecture and Design,' at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, by Aaron Betsky, curator of Architecture and Design. In his introduction wall text he wrote: "Méndez is both an artist and a graphic designer. She is a master at organizing information into minimal yet clear blocks. What is distinctive about her work is what happens around and underneath this information." The museum collected eight works into its permanent collection.[2]

In 1999 architect Thom Mayne and his office Morphosis commissioned Méndez to create a 25,000 square feet permanent art installation, a mural covering walls and ceilings, in the restaurant Tsunami[48] in Las Vegas. Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum curator Ellen Lupton showcased the work in the first National Design Triennial in New York in 2000. In the catalogue 'Design Culture Now' she wrote: "Rebeca Méndez enables two-dimensional surfaces to harbor illusions of depth, endowing them with such physical qualities as translucency and tension. From the tidy rectangle of the page to the immersive scenario of an architectural interior, she transforms images from static, self-contained objects to open, flowing fields for visual experience." Méndez credits this collaboration with the moment she felt: "Ah, I'm a fine artist. This is what I want to do. That is really when I began working in parallel as both a designer and as an artist. Prior to that moment, I was very much a designer." Méndez collaborated again with Morphosis in 2004 to create two murals for the student recreation center at the University of Cincinnati, and this work was exhibited at the Centre George Pompidou in Paris, France, as part of a 2006 retrospective of the work of Thom Mayne and Morphosis.[49][50] This project was the first design to ever receive a Platinum Award at Graphis Magazine.[51] It also received an AIGA 365 Award of Excellence in 2007.[52]

In 1999 Méndez directed and co-wrote the script of the closing scene for Mia Maestro and her character 'Ana Paulis' in Mike Figgis' film Timecode. Holly Willis wrote about this collaboration in the now defunct independent film website ifilm.net: "I simply must have her," says director Mike Figgis speaking with the utter charm that only a British accent affords, and the vehemence allowed only to film directors of note. "She's extraordinary. A poet. I couldn't stop listening to her."[citation needed]

Méndez began teaching as fully tenured professor in the Design Media Arts department for UCLA School of the Arts & Architecture in 2003.[53]

In 2004, Méndez began working with the Los Angeles Commission on Assaults Against Women (LACAAW), whom she guided toward renaming themselves as Peace Over Violence. Her work with the commission has been credited as prompting a 50% increase in donations and earning her the Ideas Over Violence award at the 45th Annual Humanitarian Awards Gala.[54][2][55]

In 2004 Méndez was invited to participate in a competition to design the user interface to the Microsoft Home, which she won.

In 2008, Méndez received a commission from the Los Angeles County Arts Commission,[56] to create a permanent public art installation at the LA County Registrar-Recorder County Clerk.[57][58]

In 2010 Méndez received a Mid-Career Fellowship from the California Community Foundation.[59]

Mendez participated in the first-ever TEDx conference at UCLA in 2011.[60][61]

In 2013 CircumSolar, Migration 1—a video art installation reflecting on the planet-wide migration of the Arctic tern—premiered at Glow, an all-night arts event on the beach of Santa Monica, California. Shortly after, the Los Angeles County Civic Arts Division commissions her to create the art component for the newly-built Pico Rivera Library. This results in "CircumSolar, Migration 2", a 132 feet long photographic mural printed on canvas running along the library wall, and a 9,000 lbs Corten steel sculpture, titled Observation Point 1.

The following year she produced "CircumSolar, Migration 4" for the Los Angeles Metro Art commission at the Crenshaw station on the K-line, which opened October 7, 2022.[62]

In 2017 she received an artist residency at SOMA in Mexico City,[63] where she focused on immigration issues and women's rights.[2] That same year she served as a juror for the Pritzker Emerging Environmental Genius award and served in this capacity again the following year.

In 2018 Méndez was a co-chair for the 2018 National Design Awards.[64][65]

Awards

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  • 1996 I.D. Magazine Design Annual, Best in Print for Art Center Catalogue 1995/96
  • 1997 Leipzig Book Fair, Bronze medal for Best Book Design from All Over the World for book on Bill Viola designed for Whitney Museum of American Art.
  • 2008 Graphis Magazine, Platinum Award in Design for murals in campus recreation center at University of Cincinnati.[66]
  • 2010 California Community Foundation Mid-Career Fellowship for Visual Artists.[67]
  • 2012 National Design Award in Communication Design from the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.[68]
  • 2013 City of Los Angeles (C.O.L.A.) Individual Artist Fellowship.[2]
  • 2016 Peace Over Violence 45th Annual Humanitarian Awards Gala honoree.[54]
  • 2017 Medal of A.I.G.A. (American Institute of Graphic Arts)[69]
  • 2017 Induction to the One Club Creative Hall of Fame in New York.[41][70][71]

References

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  1. ^ a b "UCLA Faculty profile: Rebeca Mendez". UCLA. Archived from the original on August 26, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Andersen, Margaret (September 11, 2017). "2017 AIGA Medalist Rebeca Méndez". AIGA | the professional association for design. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  3. ^ "Rebeca Méndez's Design Journey". AIGA | the professional association for design. 1 September 2008. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Rebeca Méndez Selects | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum". www.cooperhewitt.org. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c "Rebeca Méndez: Graphic Design Alumni Story". ArtCenter College of Design. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  6. ^ Gerber, Lutz, Anna, Anja (2006). Influences, A Lexicon of Contemporary Graphic Design. Berlin: Die Gestalten Verlag. p. 54. ISBN 3-89955-152-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "Dialogue: Rebeca Méndez and Polly Nooter Roberts". UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture. May 31, 2018. Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  8. ^ Spines, Christine (October 9, 2014). "Change/Makers". Art Center College of Design. Retrieved September 29, 2020.
  9. ^ Burke, Anne Marie (January 13, 2020). "Professor awarded honorary degree from ArtCenter College of Design". ucla.edu. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  10. ^ Buchman, Lorne (March 29, 2019). "Change Lab Podcast Episode 23: Rebeca Méndez on dissolving boundaries between art and design and connecting with our animal nature". artcenter.edu. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  11. ^ "Rebeca Méndez | 2010 Fellowship for Visual Artists". California Community Foundation. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  12. ^ Pineda, Dorany (November 11, 2019). "Meet six artists making the public art you'll soon see on Metro's Crenshaw/LAX Line". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  13. ^ Kerr, Dylan (December 24, 2018). "The Mandarin Duck and Avian Art at the Cooper Hewitt". The New Yorker. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  14. ^ Vienne, Veronique (1 November 1996). "Design from Skin to Screen". Graphis. 306, Nov–Dec 1996: 46–57.
  15. ^ "AMERICA NOW, 500 YEARS LATER — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  16. ^ Harper, Laurel (1999). Radical Graphics / Graphic Radicals. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. pp. tk. ISBN 978-0-8118-1680-9.
  17. ^ "Graphis". www.graphis.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  18. ^ "BILL VIOLA WHITNEY MUSEUM — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  19. ^ "Bill Viola". designarchives.aiga.org. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  20. ^ "BILL VIOLA: GOING FORTH BY DAY — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  21. ^ "Bill Viola, Going Forth By Day". designarchives.aiga.org. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  22. ^ a b "SUPRASENSORIAL BOOK — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  23. ^ "THE EXPERIMENTAL EXERCISE OF FREEDOM — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  24. ^ "TSUNAMI: NATIONAL DESIGN MUSEUM COMMISSION — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  25. ^ "Grass". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  26. ^ "HOMELAND 1 — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  27. ^ "FILM POSTERS — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  28. ^ Gertten, Fredrik (15 November 2011). "A half-rotten banana on my head?". Big Boys Gone Bananas!*. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
  29. ^ "Danish Documentary". www.danishdocumentary.com. Retrieved 2020-10-09.
  30. ^ "ORPHEUS RE:VISITED — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
  31. ^ Méndez, Rebeca (2012-10-18), Rebeca Mendez 2012 Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award Winner, retrieved 2020-10-09
  32. ^ Applewhite, Ashton (2016-03-23). "A Q&A about the book". This Chair Rocks. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
  33. ^ "IF/THEN MOTO". YouTube. October 12, 2020.
  34. ^ "AMBIENT: INTERFACE — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  35. ^ Baan, Iwan. "SHADOW OF THE SUN — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  36. ^ "BY THE THROAT — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  37. ^ "AURORA — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  38. ^ "MICROSOFT STORE — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  39. ^ "IBM E-MARKETPLACE — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  40. ^ "EVERYDAY IBM: GLOBAL BRAND BOOK — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  41. ^ a b Collins, Brian (September 12, 2017). "Rebeca Méndez: Very Anything". www.oneclub.org. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  42. ^ Kaplan, David (13 May 2002). "Collins to Depart Ogilvy for Design Post at Apple Team Will Take On His ECD, Brand Integration Group Duties". Adweek. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  43. ^ "IBM PARTNERWORLD 2002 — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  44. ^ "MOTOROLA CEBIT — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  45. ^ "TREND MICRO — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  46. ^ "THE ONE CLUB — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  47. ^ "BARBIE: ALL GIRL ARCHETYPES — Rebeca Mendez". rebecamendez.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  48. ^ "Morphopedia". www.morphosis.com. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  49. ^ "kriakria". cargocollective.com. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  50. ^ "University of Cincinnati Campus Recreation Center". morphosis.com. Morphopedia. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  51. ^ "Design Annual 2008 - Store - Graphis". www.graphis.com. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  52. ^ "AIGA 365 2007". designarchives.aiga.org. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  53. ^ "UCLA Design Media Arts / Faculty". dma.ucla.edu. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  54. ^ a b "Professor overhauls Peace Over Violence brand for greater inclusion". dailybruin.com. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  55. ^ "ArtCenter Alumna Artist and Designer Rebeca Méndez Breaks Boundaries". ArtCenter College of Design. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  56. ^ "Rebeca Mendez". LA County Department of Arts and Culture. 2016-10-27. Retrieved 2022-09-09.
  57. ^ "Registrar-Recorder, County Clerk Elections Operations Center / Lehrer Architects". yumpu.com. 3 February 2011. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  58. ^ "Press Release 2018 Los Angeles County Arts Commission" (PDF).
  59. ^ "Rebeca Méndez | 2010 Fellowship for Visual Artists". California Community Foundation. Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  60. ^ Dooley, Michael (May 2, 2011). "Rebeca Mendez on Terrorism, her TED Talk, and the Arctic Tern". Print Magazine. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  61. ^ "New TEDx conference at UCLA provides a stage for presenters to share their insights, innovations in science, technology and art". dailybruin.com. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  62. ^ "Meet six artists making the public art you'll soon see on Metro's Crenshaw/LAX Line". Los Angeles Times. November 1, 2019. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
  63. ^ SOMA-México. "Rebeca Méndez". somamexico.org. Retrieved 2022-09-09.
  64. ^ "Rebeca Méndez | Aspen Ideas". Aspen Ideas Festival. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  65. ^ "Cooper Hewitt Hosts the National Design Award Gala". MSN. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  66. ^ "- Graphis". www.graphis.com. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  67. ^ "2010 Fellows | Fellowship for Visual Artists". California Community Foundation. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  68. ^ "2012 National Design Awards Winners' Panel | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum". Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. November 1, 2012. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  69. ^ "2017 AIGA awards gala". AIGA | the professional association for design. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  70. ^ "Creative Hall of Fame / Rebeca Mendez". oneclub.org. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  71. ^ Esquer, Rafael (2017-09-14). "Life is Magnanimous: Rebeca Méndez and I". Alfalfa Studio. Retrieved 2020-10-14.