Project Category: Art in Nature

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Nosotros

Nosotros

In 2010, Eva Kullgren, a Swedish housewife, left Stockholm on a small sailboat, without electronic navigation instruments, like the ancient Vikings. She sailed through the Black Sea to the Mediterranean coasts and, upon reaching Cape Verde, she ventured into the immensity of the Atlantic Ocean. After 18 days she reached Brazil; but on her way back to the U.S.A., the sailboat suffered damages and the marine currents brought her to our shores of Dorado Beach. Those same currents brought us the tree from which this sculpture was created to honor our contemporary Viking Shipwreck.

Manolo Rodríguez

Manolo Rodríguez

According to Buoyancy (The ability to float) was made in 2011 as an experimental site-specific artwork with variable dimensions. The materials used were fiberglass, resin, aluminum, wood, plastic drums, and plants such as Cupey (Clusia Rosea), Maguey (Agavaideae Asparagacea), & Cactus (leptocerusquadricostatus).

Rodrigo Montenegro

Rodrigo Montenegro

As part of arte_FITS.FOUNDATION’s artist residency program, Puerto Rican born and based artist, Rodrigo Montenegro, produced Danza del Viento, an artisan sculptural series that aims to explore the revitalization of nature through balance and movement. Throughout the years Montenegro has developed his sculptures with a variety of methods and materials ranging from sand to stone. The mystic element in each piece becomes essential as he sculpts the esoteric messages and figures that ultimately form the artwork. In a more commercial approach, Montenegro has been known for creating stone and sand made furniture and company logos.

Jack Henry

Jack Henry

My work utilizes discarded objects and plant life collected from my surroundings. Some of the material is embedded between layers of gypsum cement to represent the passage of time. Replicas of objects are cast in resin or plaster and become pieces for an assemblage. Found paper is decollaged together and drawn into to create imagined landscapes.

Eduardo Cabrer

Eduardo Cabrer

Golden Cubes is an artistic exploration of the mathematical concept known as the Golden Section. Some affirm that mathematics is the language of the universe, and indeed this numerical sequence is found in nature, as in the growth of flowers and fruits. However, artist Eduardo Cabrer uses this concept to create a structure based on colored cubes that do not resemble nature at all. On the contrary, Cabrer synthesizes the concept and thus problematizes the idea that all natural phenomena can be understood through science.

Carlos Mercado

Carlos Mercado

In the Caribbean there were several pre-Columbian cultures and the work "Untitled" is a reinterpretation of this rich heritage. These ethnic groups did not develop an alphabet, but their petroglyphs are still found in special places, particularly in ceremonial centers similar to the one recreated in this work. In excavations prior to the construction of the Dorado Beach Resort remains of these ancestors of the Puerto Ricans were found , so the artist Carlos Mercado appropriated their graphic language, but using contemporary resources, to pay homage to the first artists of Dorado.

Ivelisse Jiménez

Ivelisse Jiménez

In her practice, painter Ivelisse Jiménez has explored the limits of chromatism beyond painting and canvas, filling entire spaces with color without the need for a brush. The artist uses processed materials, such as fabrics, plastics and pastes, along with acrylic paintings to create bright compositions that surpass the limits of a frame. "Untitled" is her first intervention into the woods, and she used the forest itself as support for the work. As a result, the viewer goes through a kind of labyrinth of colors that provokes the experience of entering a kaleidoscope.

Vientre Compartido

Vientre Compartido

The Suárez brothers have made their career by addressing ecological issues through their art production. As nature one of their main inspirations, the hurricanes that hit Puerto Rico in 2017 affected their job. Mata Palo (Killer of trees) is a colloquial name given to the Cupey tree because of its aggressive growth that sometimes affect other species; but it also refers to the hurricanes that killed so many trees. In this sculpture, the artists make reference to nature’s way of being, literally lifting up new life from the fallen.

Jaime Rodríguez Crespo

Jaime Rodríguez Crespo

“An Air from the City is a quest of how to raise awareness and treasure nature, how to coexist without destroying it. “Concrete doesn’t give us fresh air”. Conceptually speaking An Air from the City still being developed; I think the impact it generates the experience in the spectator is the final concept: to reach the goal of making them treasure what’s left of nature.”

Takashi Hinoda

Takashi Hinoda

The installation, Unsounded Voices; based on the Japanese syllabary, Katakana; was located in Dorado Beach’s Pterocarpus Forest. The pieces were hanged from the trees at altering heights and planes “with the intention of creating a harmonious composition within the environment”. For the artist, the installation represented a divergence from his usual artwork due to its temporary state as well as the materials used.

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