Silvana Agostoni | |
Birth Name: | Silvana Agostoni |
Education: | Escuela Activa de Fotografía Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana The School of Visual Arts New York City |
Field: | Photography |
Silvana Agostoni is a Mexican-Italian visual artist whose work is known for her photographs exploring issues of the body, identity and landscape. Her work has been exhibited throughout the United States and internationally. She lives and works in Minneapolis and Mexico City.
Agostoni was born into a creative family. Her father, Giorgio (Jorge) Agostoni, an architect from Italy, played a major role in the planning and design of key museums in Mexico and other parts of the world since the 1960s, including the Museo Nacional de Antropología in Mexico City and the Olympic Museum in Switzerland.[1] Her mother, Lucille Urencio, a Mexican actress, worked extensively with theater director Juan José Gurrola and was a drama professor at Universidad Iberoamericana.
Agostoni was driven to study photography as soon as she finished high school. She spent two years taking photography classes at Escuela Activa de Fotografía to get her certification as a professional photographer. Afterwards, she obtained her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic Design at Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana in Mexico City.[2] Following the completion of her bachelor’s degree, she moved to New York City to get her Master of Fine Arts in Photography, Video and New Media at The School of Visual Arts New York City (SVA NYC).[3]
Agostoni’s art focuses on landscapes, represented in both the body and the world and how they transform and behave over time.
The large-scale photographic series, On Veils, takes a look at natural elements such as mist, fog, and steam to create bodies of art that represent dramatic and transformational sceneries.[4] Many of the images in the series examine environmental forces as a way to simplify physical space and make it serene.[5]
Traces is a project depicting ephemera taken at a former penitentiary in Mexico. The images are re-interpretations of icons and remnants left behind, creating an illusion of presence.[6]
Topografias is a series of photographs that depict close up images of the human body, in which the contours of body’s skin translate the self into a map.[7] The prints capture small snippets of skin, nails, and hair. Agostoni critiques visual determinism by showing diverse intersectional bodies defined by nationality, gender, and so on.[7]
In 2019, Agostoni received the prestigious fellowship Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte, a three-year program sponsored by the National Fund for Arts and Culture in Mexico. Issues addressed in the works of her fellowship include the themes presented in White among others that portray the natural world. In her photographic practice, she also considers the differences between her photographs of physical landscapes and 19th century landscape photography. In 2021, she collaborated with Springboard for the Arts to discuss what art she makes while in isolation during the U.S. quarantine period.[8]
2019-2020 | Identidades[9] | Museo Archivo de Fotografía | Mexico City, Mexico | |
2019 | Thirty Three Views | Second Shift Studio Space | Saint Paul, Minnesota | |
2011 | Manchas en el Muro (solo) | Centro Fotográfico Alvarez Bravo | Oaxaca, Mexico | |
2011 | Huellas (solo)[10] | Museo Archivo de la Fotografía | Mexico City, Mexico | |
2009 | Only Water | Dina Mitrani Gallery | Miami, Florida | |
2007 | Face: Scavenging Identity, Eight artists explore the margins of portrait genre | Baahng Gallery | New York, New York | |
2002 | ARCO International Contemporary Art Fair | Galería Enrique Guerrero | Madrid, Spain[11] | |
2000 | Latin American Artist-Photographers from the Lehigh University Art Gallery Collection[12] | Museo del Barrio | New York, New York | |
2000 | Topografías[13] | Centro de la Imagen | Mexico City, Mexico | |
1998 | New Visions Five Contemporary Mexican Photographers | Houston Center for Photography | Houston, Texas | |
1997 | Physiognomy (solo) | White Columns Gallery | New York, New York |