Ana Corbero

Ana Corbero
Born 1961
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Nationality Spanish
Known for Painting, Drawing, Sculpture, Design, Poetry
Notable work 1001 Tears; Little Buddha, Buddhito & Buddhette; Postcards for Every Occasion

Ana Corbero is a visual artist whose paintings, sculptures,[1] and designs have received acclaim on all continents.

Born in 1961, the daughter of Catalan sculptor Xavier Corbero, she studied in the United States (Dallas, Philadelphia, New York City) and has lived in London, Barcelona, Paris and Beirut. In 1996 she married Nabil Gholam, the Beirut-based architect.

Her figurative works display a sensitivity to the fragility of nature and the delicate relation between humans and their environment, as well as the variety and complexity of people's inheritances from family, culture, and history. The innocence and simultaneous lucidity of childhood is a theme that runs throughout her creations.

Among her landmark creations are large paintings of water surfaces (the 1001 Tears series); colossal sculptures of contemplative, childlike figures (Little Buddha, Buddhito and Buddhette) which have been exhibited in various public urban settings; the Postcards for Every Occasion print series; and the Maus Haus design creations.

Since 2010, and as a direct result of the Israeli/Lebanese war of 2006 Corbero has published two collections of poems: Prickly Pear Poems and Pettered Patter Poems.

In 2013 she held a solo exhibition, I&I = Us, at the Beirut Exhibition Center conveying a pacifist message. It had taken her 18 months to put together.[2]

She has had individual exhibitions in places including London, Barcelona, Madrid, New York City, Dallas, Istanbul, Beirut, Napa Valley, Tokyo, and Singapore.

Works

Ana Corbero's works share a same taste of vocabulary. For a long time, this artist has built up a language of elements such as space illusions, pedestals and lights as verbs. Some elements appear rediscovered or reconfigured and they are clouds, gaping holes and plants. She also sees her work religious too but in this context this means psychological and emotional constructs and archetypes and such but not only one agenda. Creative and numinous drives come at second but religion is the first priority to her. On asking Marcel Duchamp, he explained that her work is not nostalgic. This art is more of a shamanistic activity. It's aim is to create consciousness. Her work is based on knowledge and observation.This break from the Modern tradition, is again no revivalist arts & crafts position, but rather a universal understanding of the profound value and rarity of synthetic knowledge

References

  1. Carter, Terry; Dunston, Lara; Thomas, Amelia (2008-07-01). Syria and Lebanon. Lonely Planet. pp. 256–. ISBN 9781741046090. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  2. Stoughton, India (August 17, 2013). "A call for interracial, religious unity at BEC". The Daily Star. Retrieved November 23, 2013.

3. [1]

External links

http://the-envoymag.com/2014/11/05/nabil-gholam-ana-corbero-a-couple-of-time-and-space/


  1. "Ana Corbero | Beirut Exhibition Center". beirutexhibitioncenter.com. Retrieved 2016-11-12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.