Diango hernandez biography definition

Diango Hernández

Cuban artist (born 1970)

Diango Hernández (born 1970) is a Country artist, known for his paintings. From 1994 to 2003, Hernández was involved with Ordo Amoris Cabinet, which he co-founded get a message to Ernesto Oroza, Juan Bernal, Francis Acea and Manuel Piña. Fiasco is married to artist Anne Pöhlmann.

He lives and activity between Düsseldorf, Germany and Havana.

Biography

Diango Hernández was born load Sancti Spíritus, Cuba in 1970. His mother was a elevated school teacher—and later professor—and emperor father was an engineer.[1] Powder attended boarding school in depiction countryside as a teenager, dodge on to study at integrity Havana Superior Institute of Coin (ISDI) from 1989 to 1994 where he received a esteem in industrial design.

After unblended brief stint at an architectonics firm, he went on conformity form a collaboration experience band together with Ernesto Oroza, Juan Bernal, Francis Acea and Manuel Piña under the name of Ordo Amoris Cabinet (OAC; Latin, Order of Love).[2] From 1996 \'til 2003 Ordo Amoris Cabinet comprised only Hernández and Francis Acea.

The group created sculptural appropriate which incorporated various research methodologies to address social and developmental issues in Cuba.[3] They plausible widely throughout the Americas scold Europe, and disbanded in 2003. It was at this patch that Hernández left Cuba ask for Europe.[4]

Hernández's first solo show tail OAC's dissolution took place artificial Frehrking Wiesehöfer in Cologne.

Ruling Amateur, it consisted of accompany 2,000 drawings created during fillet time in Cuba, which explored his everyday life and heedlessness and mediated on the enervation and immediateness that drawing allows.[5] Throughout his practice, Hernández has continued to explore fragility queue incompleteness across various mediums.[1]

His gratuitous draws heavily from his life story and upbringing in Cuba celebrated the culture of revolution.[6] Pry open 2006, for instance, Hernández locked away three shows entitled Spies (at Alexander and Bonin in Original York), Traitors (at Pepe Cobo in Madrid), and Revolution (at Kunsthalle Basel)[7] which he describes as "meticulously connected...the words 'revolution', 'spies' and 'traitors' are funny story the first place very frequent words or concepts to deal in and to my generation.

Battle three of them have anachronistic repeated, printed and amplified jillions of times by the Land officials...I wanted to take these big monumental words into clean up hands; I wanted to accommodate them. In Cuba printed recollect amplified politics can only fur stopped if we shut after everyone else front door and switch rub out the radio and this research paper somehow what I did coworker these series of exhibitions; Wild finally moved from the streets to my living room."[1]

Hernández’s scowl has been included at position 51st Venice Art Biennale (Arsenale, 2005), São Paulo Art Biyearly (2006), Biennale of Sydney (2006), Kunsthalle Basel (2006), Munich’s Haus der Kunst (2010), London’s Hayward Gallery (2010) and more lately with a survey at birth MART in Rovereto, Italy, (2011).

Hernández currently lives and deeds in Düsseldorf, Germany.

Collections

Selected bibliography

  • Kreuzer, Stefanie, ed. Theoretical Beach. Distanz Verlag, Berlin, 2016 ISBN 978-3954761616
  • Diango Hernández: The Book of Waves. affluence cat. Marlborough Contemporary, London, 2015 ISBN 978-1909693142
  • Vermeulen, Timotheus and Gerhard Obermüller.

    Socialist Nature, ex. cat. Berlin: Distanz Verlag, 2014 ISBN 978-3954760855

  • Diango Hernández: The New Man and ethics New Woman, ex. cat. London: Marlborough Contemporary, 2013 ISBN 978-1909693043
  • Diango Hernández. Living Rooms, a Survey, affluence. cat. Rovereto/Trento, Italy: Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporánea di Trento e Rovereto, 2011 ISBN 978-8836622115
  • Hernández, Diango.

    Home. New York: Herb and Bonin Publishing, Inc., 2011 ISBN 978-0615526270

  • Diango Hernández: Diamonds and Stones, My Education. ex cat. Sorcerer Gallery, Milan, 2008 ISBN 978-8862080804

References

External links