Anthony Goicolea:
Related
February 17, 2009–June 28, 2009
February 17, 2009–June 28, 2009
Anthony Goicolea: Related featured recent work of first-generation Cuban-American Anthony Goicolea. Noted for his fantastic photographic narratives where he often acts out provocative charades and exploits, Goicolea turned to inventing a conceptual family album. The exhibition was comprised of drawings and photographs that resemble portraiture from the mid-1800s when the innovation of the tintype process transported image-making from the hand of the artist to the camera.
Goicolea reclaims faces of relatives lost to memory through the family’s journey from Cuba to the US, to offer a tender connection between the artist and his ancestral lineage. Through the act of making the work, Goicolea’s sense of loss is turned into reconnection. Related included images of dinner tables with empty seats, symbolically extending an invitation for the artist to rejoin and discover his family circle.
While Goicolea’s earlier work explored androgyny, puberty, and homosexuality—often with a dose of humor—it also raised questions of personal identity, history, and time. Related furthered the artist’s investigations to deepen his humanistic concerns with appearances. He questions how images and perceptions intertwine. This body of work connects to contemporary artists Annette Messager and Lorna Simpson who have explored, each in different ways, identity construction, process, and reclamation. Overall Goicolea’s work can be read as the making of a diary of experiences that confront the idea of self.
Anthony Goicolea was born in 1971 in Atlanta, Georgia. He holds an MFA from Pratt Institute of Art, New York, a BFA in Drawing and Painting, and a BA in Art History from The University of Georgia, Athens. His work is in numerous private and public collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of Art, New York. He lives and works in Brooklyn.
Curated by
Cydney Payton, Executive Director & Chief Curator
MCA Denver thanks the citizens of the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District.