Shifting Landscapes 

2024

A vibrant, abstract explosion of colors and textures with flowers, feathers, and intricate patterns against a soft blue background.

Firelei Báez: I'm Firelei Báez and I'm a visual artist who makes all kinds of things from paintings to sculptures, to drawings, to prints, you name it. When I think of this painting, I tell people: get really, really close. "What is the first thing you can see when you get to the bare canvas?" And the one thing you might notice is these little putti heads blowing gusts of wind. 

Narrator: In Renaissance paintings, Putti were baby angel figures, similar to Cupid.

Firelei Báez: And if you look to the left, there's this old man blowing hot air. And if you look to the bottom right, there's a baby face blowing air. And it was a depiction by the Dutch of the nautical winds. So it was a way to teach you how to navigate potentially and how to, in essence, contain the world. These winds that are from this diagram are creating this figure in the middle. And there is a flurry of elements and flowers and symbols that make up her body. And it is meant to refer to this figure of the Ciguapa, this Caribbean trickster that has informed so much of my work. Ciguapa is this multivalent—it's a word that can either mean angry or beautiful. Guapa for Puerto Ricans is beautiful, and guapa for Dominicans is angry. I'll take both because this is a fierce creature that is through that projected desire, something that can become either a thing for the viewer that is hurtful or for another viewer, the thing that frees them.


Firelei Báez, Untitled (Tabula Anemographica seu Pyxis Navtic), 2021. Acrylic and oil on archival printed canvas, 89 7/8 × 111 7/8 × 1 1/2 in. (228.3 × 284.2 × 3.8 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from Chrissy Taylor and Lee Broughton 2022.104. © Firelei Báez

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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