Ana Maria Hernando:
La Montaña
January 27, 2009–April 19, 2009
January 27, 2009–April 19, 2009
Ana María Hernando: La Montaña resulted from Hernando's residency at MCA Denver. The artist mounded petticoats to form the work, which was influenced by her travels to the remote village of Mollamarca located high in the Andean mountains, outside the city of Cusco in southwestern Peru. This is the fourth project in which she drew from her experiences from the Peruvian village to create an art installation.
The colorful petticoats worn by the women of Mollamarca are enchanting. Layered under their skirts, the petticoats add cheerfulness and a magical element to the atmosphere as the women work on steep mountainsides, weave, sing, or dance. For La Montaña, Hernando brought the crocheted petticoats from Mollamarca to her studio in Boulder, Colorado where she stiffened them using glue and resin. Students from MCA Denver’s partner schools participated in the process during the on-site installation of the work.
By working in varied media—such as drawing, painting, installation, video, and poetics—Hernando has created a flexible artistic practice that allows her to bridge her past and present experiences throughout the Americas. She often collaborates to create new contexts when she is working with found objects. Seemingly incompatible opposites like old and new, craft and fine art, man-made objects, and nature, are joined together as part of Hernando’s vision. For example, she drew on the talents of Carmelite nuns in Buenos Aires, Argentina to embroider shaped cloth forms that she applied to gallery walls like drawings. She has also taken shoes made from rubber tires and worn by children of the Andes to create a wall mandala.
Ana María Hernando was born in 1959 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She holds a BFA from California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland. Hernando has had many group and solo exhibitions including at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, Colorado; Center for Visual Art, Denver; Museo de las Americas, Denver; International Center of Bethlehem, West Bank Palestine; and Tweed Museum of Art, University of Minnesota, Duluth. She lives and works in Boulder, Colorado.
Curated by
Cydney Payton, Executive Director & Chief Curator
MCA Denver thanks the citizens of the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District.