Whitney Biennial 2017

Mar 17–June 11, 2017


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Raúl de Nieves

10

Floor 5

Born 1983 in Morelia, Mexico
Lives in Brooklyn, NY

For his site-specific work for the 2017 Biennial, Raúl de Nieves covered six floor-to-ceiling windows with eighteen “stained-glass” panels he made using paper, wood, glue, tape, beads, and acetate sheets. The windows create a vivid backdrop for de Nieves’s elaborately beaded sculptures, some of which are based on shoes (but are adorned to the point of abstraction), while others take the form of figures draped in heavy costumes worn by the artist in his performances.

In all of his work, de Nieves treats modest materials with meticulous attention, turning the mundane into the fantastical—with metamorphosis a common theme. The windows depict a world in which death and waste are omnipresent, often symbolized by a fly. Unlike many Western spiritual traditions, however, de Nieves presents death as a metaphor for the possibility of spectacular transformation and rebirth in an unpredictable and turbulent world.

Somos Monstros 2, 2016

Mannequin with cone shaped head covered in pieces of cloth
Mannequin with cone shaped head covered in pieces of cloth

Raúl De Nieves (b. 1983), installation view of Somos Monstros 2, 2016. Beads, glue, found trim, cardboard, costume jewelry, and dress, 86 x 32 x 23 in. (218.4 x 81.3 x 58.4 cm). Collection of the artist; courtesy Company Gallery. Photograph by Bill Orcutt



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Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

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