René Peña
René de Jesus Peña Gonzalez is a Cuban artist specializing in photography, and exposed his pictures in different exhibitions in Cuba (Havana), Spain and in the US (Seattle, Pennsylvania, New York City).
History
Born in Havana in 1957, René Peña graduated from the University of Havana with a specialization in English. He took his first pictures with his family camera at the age of eight years but has never had any formal training. His work focuses on the duality between human inability to escape institutionalization and human desire for individualism. His photography is characterized by stark contrasts, between black and white, subject and background, subject and object. His need for contrast is also reflected in his place of residence: Peña currently inhabits the Cerro neighbourhood of Cuba which is home to a mostly poor African-Caribbean population, despite having been an enclave of Havana’s richest families in the 19th century.
Although sometimes compared to Robert Mapplethorpe, he cites as his influences photographers Eduardo Moñoz Ordoqui and Marta Maria Perez Bravo (both of whom focus on black-and-white photography). As of late, René Peña has been experimenting with colour photos, as well as with digital cameras.
Solo exhibitions
- René Peña: Fotografías, Fototeca de Cuba, Havana (2002)
- René Peña: Introspectiva, Casa de los Tiros, Granada, Spain (2002)
- Manmade Materials, Suyama Space, Seattle.
Collective exhibitions
- Cuba 1960-2000 Sogno e realtà, Fondazione Italiana per la Fotografia, Turin, Italy (2002)
- Latin American Artist Photographers from the de Lehigh University Art Gallery Collection, Lehigh University, Pennsylvania (2001)
- Passionately Cuban, University Art Museum, State University of New York at Albany, New York (2001).
- Queloides: Race and Racism in Cuban Contemporary Art, Havana-Pittsburgh-New York City-Cambridge, Ma. (2010-2012)
- Drapetomania: Grupo Antillano and the Art of Afro-Cuba (2013)