Doris Salcedo

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Shibboleth at Tate Modern
Shibboleth at Tate Modern

Doris Salcedo (born 1958) is a Colombian-born sculptor. Salcedo completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano in 1980, before traveling to New York, where she completed a Master of Fine Arts degree at New York University. She then returned to Bogotá to teach at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Her work is influenced by her experiences of life in Colombia, and is generally composed of items of furniture.[1]

Doris Salcedo is the eighth artist to have been commissioned to produce work for the turbine hall of the Tate Modern gallery in London. Her piece, Shibboleth (2007), is a 167-metre-long crack in the hall's floor that Salcedo says "represents borders, the experience of immigrants, the experience of segregation, the experience of racial hatred. It is the experience of a Third World person coming into the heart of Europe".[2][3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Biography on Tate Collection website. URL accessed on 8 April, 2007.
  2. ^ "Sculptor fills Tate with a hole", BBC News, 2000-10-08. Retrieved on 2000-10-08. 
  3. ^ Salcedo Naked, Colombian Art

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