Project Category: Art in Nature

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Miya Ando

Miya Ando

“This piece [Obon: Puerto Rico] is inspired by the ancient Japanese festival of Obon. The ancient event; which occurs every 15th day of the 7th month of the Lunar Calendar {mid-August}; is a three day ceremony made to commemorate and honor the departed. It is believed that during Obon, the spirits of one’s departed family members and ancestors return home and are reunited with their loved ones. Lanterns are hung inside the house to welcome the spirits and on the evening of the last day, the lanterns are placed on rivers in order to guide the spirits back to the netherworld. There is a beautiful non-denominational notion of respect, interconnectivity, history, and memory that is celebrated with the festival of Obon”.

Vilmarie Serrano

Vilmarie Serrano

It is often said that the representation of the sublime does not suffice to express this unique concept. It is necessary to previously experience the sublime, throughout day-to-day life experiences. Only then, the artist evolves into an explorer of natural places and settings. Often unobserved by the common eye, these spaces become the idyllic backbone for the development of the artwork, offering us a significant aesthetic experience. Certainly, this description fits the installation “The Regeneration Circle”, which Vimarie Serrano has presented in a small natural reserve in Dorado.

Kim Myeongbeom

Kim Myeongbeom

Journey is a participatory art project inspired by a popular Korean folk religion influenced by Buddhism. Each stone inside the fisherman’s boat corresponds to a personal wish; while passing by, people add one stone found around the path and make a wish. Through this cooperation, Korean artist, Kim Myeongbeom recreates an accidental sculpture and appeals to the participant’s imagination and desires, inviting the viewer to take part in a shared voyage.

Kim Myeongbeom

Kim Myeongbeom

Imagine waking up one day and looking out the window to enjoy the surroundings. When all of a sudden, out in the body of water that swims along where you are, a small boat with “extravagant trees, plants, and shrubs” appears. Immediately, issues such as locational identity and immigration begin to surge from the depths of the mind. So you wonder whom, how, and why as the boat floats on its own business fulfilling the artistic purpose behind it.

Teresa Mulet

Teresa Mulet

As part of the inauguration of arte_FITS.FOUNDATION’s community program Dorado Es Verde, Venezuelan artist Teresa Mulet presented the collaborative project, en(re) for the communities of Dorado. The project incorporated a direct participation of high school students from José Santos Alegría and Tasis Dorado.

Pseudomero

Pseudomero

The winner and inaugural artist of Yearly Open Call 2010 was the Puerto Rican urban artist, Pseudomero. His artistic intervention, Trees of the World, involved the creation of two murals on the bridge at Road 693 were the inspiration was derived from Puerto Rican writer and activist Clemente Soto’s poem Estos árboles. The murals contained a combination of visual imagery, portraying in a vibrant way the most emblematic trees in Puerto Rico: the Palm Tree, the Flamboyán, and the Ceiba. It also contained excerpts [stanza’s 2 & 4] from Soto’s poem, which allowed the exploration of the written word as an image.

Vientre Compartido

Vientre Compartido

In December 2009, the brainstorming of a utopian project began to unfold. After combing the “canvas” of Dorado and deciding how the twins would create the artwork, the concept was finally developed: an artistic intervention with a “sand trap” at the famous East Golf Course at Dorado Beach – the “Mona Lisa of golf courses”.

Quintín Rivera Toro

Quintín Rivera Toro

The installation, Un Espacio Libre, by Puerto Rican artist Quintín Rivera-Toro, was located at the Pterocarpus Officinalis natural reserve at Dorado Beach. The artwork could be understood as an actualization of the landscape conception. Un Espacio Libre consists of a photographic series at a monumental scale depicting clouds over immense blue skies. The images were primitively conceived and installed in the urban milieu of Quintín’s natal city, Caguas, P.R., as a critique toward visual contamination, usually generated by the surplus of signs and billboard advertising. The series was placed in public spaces designated originally for advertising purposes, offering the audience a visual relief from the endless publicity that calls every day to ones attention.

Rafael Trelles

Rafael Trelles

The Forbidden Tree by Rafael Trelles; born in Puerto Rico with a bachelor’s degree in Plastic Arts from the University of Puerto Rico and graduate studies at the Academia San Carlos, Universidad Autonoma de Mexico; is a dry tree painted red located in the middle of a pond. The presence of this tree is filled with mythological, archetypal, but above all theological references for its purpose is to alarm us from the past of the future. It is about a call to reflection as asserted by the artist about our endangered natural environment; “The human being has disobeyed and is at the verge of expulsion from his only paradise”.

Dhara Rivera

Dhara Rivera

Rivera’s most recent works explore the dichotomy between exterior and intimate spaces, between liberties and limits, and intimate space, between reality and imagination. The artist playfully combines an array of elements, which yield hybrids made up of a multiplicity of references.

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