Regina José Galindo

Regina José Galindo
Born 1974
Guatemala City, Guatemala
Occupation Performance artist
Website
http://www.reginajosegalindo.com/

Regina José Galindo (born 1974) is a Guatemalan performance artist who specializes in body art. She was born in Guatemala City.

Performances

She first gave two performances in Guatemala in 1999, and gained international fame. One of her well-known acts include ¿Quién Puede Borrar las Huellas? (Translated: "Who Can Erase the Traces"), made in 2003, in which she walked from the Congress of Guatemala building to the National Palace, dipping her bare feet at intervals in a white basin full of human blood as a vigorous protest against the presidential candidacy of Guatemala’s former dictator José Efraín Ríos Montt.[1]

Another of her notable works was titled Perra (2005), in which she carved the Spanish word perra, or bitch, on her legs, in protest against violence against women.[2]

She frequently collaborates with other art performers, including compatriot Aníbal López.

Exhibitions

In October 2008, Galindo exhibited alongside renown artists like Tania Bruguera and Jimmie Durham at MoMA PS1 for NeoHooDoo: Art for a Forgotten Faith, an exhibition co-organized by The Menil Collection.[3]

Between January 31 until March 29, 2009, Modern Art Oxford featured Galindo in Regina José Galindo: The Body of Others.[4] According to Clare Carolin, the show was the first major UK presentation of Galindo's work as well as the first monographic survey of her work.[5]

Between March 25 and June 8, 2014, Padiglione d'Arte Contemporanea (PAC) exhibited a selection of Galindo's work in Estoy Viva. The show was divided in five sections: Politics, Woman, Violence, Organic and Death. Works such as ¿Quién puede borrar las huellas? (Who can erase the traces?, 2003), Himenoplastia (2004), Mientras, ellos siguen libres (While they are still free, 2007) and Caparazon (Shell, 2010) were presented alongside newer works that had not been exhibited before in Italy.[6]

Recognition

Galindo received the Golden Lion award at the Venice Biennale in 2005, in the category of “artists under 30”, for her video Himenoplastia.[7] This work, nevertheless, got a particularly hostile reception during its first showing in Guatemala, in 2004. The controversial work depicted surgical reconstruction of the artist’s hymen.[8]

In October 2009, Exit Art showed a solo exhibition of Galindo's work as part of their SOLO series and Performance in Crisis program.[9]

A book on Galindo’s performance work has been published in Italy (Vanilla Edizioni, 2006). Galindo is also a writer of poetry and narrative; in 1998 she received the Myrna Mack Foundation's Premio Unico de Poesía in Guatemala for Personal e intransmisible (Scripta Coloquia, 2000).

In 2011 the jury of the 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts in Ljubljana (Dave Beech, Christian Höller, Urška Jurman, and Ulay /Frank Uwe Laysiepen/) awarded her with the Grand Prize for the works: Confesión (Confession), 2007 which was produced in Spain and inspired by the extraordinary rendition flights uncovered by a team of local reportes in Palma de Mallorca, and the Prince Claus Awards.[10]

List of works

List of some of her performances
Year Performance Location Comment
2014 “Exhalación (Estoy Viva)” PAC Milan For this performance Galindo lied naked at the ground floor of the pavilion. Under cold temperatures, one person at a time was invited to hold a mirror under her nose. The clouded mirror being the only sign of life, contradicting all of the signs of an apparent death.[11]
2011 “ALARMA” Banco de España Metro Station, Madrid, Spain A Site–specific video installation by Regina José Galindo, commissioned by La Caja Blanca[12] for the tunnels adjacent to the vaults which protect Spain’s national gold reserves.
2007 “Confesión” Palma de Mallorca, Spain Inspired by waterboarding. Based on recently declassified CIA documents.[13]


A videotape of this performance was presented as an installation during the Sydney Biennial of 2010.
A videotape of this performance was presented as an installation at the Venice Biennial of 2009.[14]
‘Performing Torture’,[15] Essay by Professor Julian Stallabrass, preface to "Confesión", Regina José Galindo, to be published in 2011.

2006 “Corona” Plaza Central, Guatemala City installation, commemorating over 6040 killings during the Año de la Paz
2005 “Perra” Prometeo Galery, Milan, Italy self-flagellation with a knife, carving the word "perra" into her skin, protesting the killing of women
2004 “El Peso de la Sangre” Plaza Central, Guatemala City sitting under structure in plaza as a liter of blood emptied, drop by drop, over Galindo's head and clothes
2003 “¿Quién puede borrar las huellas?” Guatemala City Galindo walked through the streets carrying a bowl of human blood, repeatedly stepping in the bowl to create bloody footprints
2001 “Angelina” Guatemala during this work, Galindo spent one month dressed as a maid
2000 “Sobremesa” Guatemala City performance/installation
1999 “El cielo llora tanto que debería ser mujer” Guatemala City and Madrid, Spain
“Lo voy a gritar al viento” Guatemala City

See also

Bibliography

References

External links