Diana Larrea
Bio
DIANA LARREA (Madrid, 1972). Winner of the Marcelino Botín Foundation Scholarship, the Vida 6.0 Award from the Telefónica Foundation, or the Artistic Creation Award from the Community of Madrid. She has exhibited at the Museu Nacional do Conjunto Cultural da República de Brasilia (Brazil), at the National Center of Contemporary Art in Moscow (Russia), at the Kunsthall Charlottenborg in Copenhagen (Denmark), at Espai 13 of the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona and at the EACC Espai d'Art Contemporani in Castelló. Her works are found in collections such as the National Library of Madrid, Blütenweiss Archive of Berlin, Centro Ex Teresa Arte Actual of Mexico City, ABC Collection, Caja Madrid Collection, Documentation Center on Art and Nature CDAN Huesca, National Chalcography, Unicaja Málaga Collection , Higher Sports Council, General Directorate of Women of the community of Madrid, BBVA Foundation, Botín Foundation, MACUF Unión FENOSA Museum of Contemporary Art A Coruña, Ino-cho Paper Museum Kochi-ken Japan, Alain Servais in Belgium, among others .
Statement
She is a Spanish visual artist who, throughout a long professional career, has used different plastic languages and disciplines such as installation, video, photography or drawing in her work. Her most recognized works are the specific interventions carried out in public spaces. Within the diversity and versatility displayed by his artistic proposals, she has always maintained a personal commitment to certain symbolic conflicts, both contemporary and from the historical past. The empathetic dialogue that she establishes with the social tensions of our civilization has been a common denominator in the entirety of her work.
Additional information
Un trabajo hibrido de activismo feminista e investigación histórica. Autorretratos de grandes pintoras de la historia del arte para modificarlos digitalmente y presentarlos ante el espectador como si fueran registros de una fantasmagoría. Los autorretratos nos ofrecen una reafirmación de la identidad de cada creadora y nos ayudan a conectar mejor con su singularidad.
An hybrid work of feminist activism and historical research. Self-portraits of great painters from the history of art to digitally modify them and present them to the viewer as if they were records of a phantasmagoria. Self-portraits offer a reaffirmation of the identity of each
creator and helps us to better identify with their uniqueness.