New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts to present Estelio

March 15, 2023

The Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, is pleased to announce its spring exhibition, Estelio, featuring work past and present of Puerto Rican artist Mónica Félix. The exhibition will be on view on the Institute of Fine Art’s website – www.ifa.nyu.edu . The Institute of Fine Arts is also honored to present a rebirth of Félix’s series, Alláfuera. For further information, please call the Institute of Fine Arts at 212.992.5800. About the Institute of Fine Arts at NYUSince 1932 the Institute of Fine Arts has been dedicated to graduate teaching and advanced research in the history of art, archaeology, and conservation.

The Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, is pleased to announce its spring exhibition, Estelio, featuring work past and present of Puerto Rican artist Mónica Félix.

As part of the Great Hall Exhibition series, the exhibition continues a commitment to celebrating the practices of exemplary women artist and is the third in the series to take place online. Fluid like the sea from which Félix draws much of her inspiration, the exhibition will incorporate both in-person and virtual experiences, including the online exhibition opening on March 24, and two public programs.

The exhibition will be on view on the Institute of Fine Art’s website – www.ifa.nyu.edu .

In addition, an in-person film screening will take place at the Institute on Apr. 28 at 6:30 p.m. (The James B. Duke House, 1 East 78th Street, New York, NY).

The exhibition title, Estelio, is Spanish for “stellium,” an astrological phenomenon in which three or more planets align under a single zodiac sign or house. Each of Félix’s artistic projects becomes a star within the larger constellation of her oeuvre, and the online exhibition acts as the birth chart to which these stars belong, situating them within their full context for the first time. The show’s site takes the form of the birth chart, through which audiences are able to navigate different works as they relate to each of Félix’s own astrological houses.

Projects such as Romance Tropical demonstrate Félix’s engagement with archival resources and what she calls “half-truths.” The series of photographic and video work revolves around the 1934 film of the same name. The second Spanish-language talkie in the world—and the first ever Puerto Rican film with sound—the movie depicted a man’s search for love and riches and his adventure on the “savage island,” Mu. Sometime in the late 1930s, the film vanished. With such an important piece of Puerto Rican media history seemingly gone forever, Félix reimagined—with the script and other archives that were available—the film through a feminist lens, by embodying the two lead female characters and the actresses who portrayed them. In her reimagination, the characters are named after their actresses. Félix’s body—and in turn, the characters’ bodies belonging to the actresses—become the sites for both rapture and doom. Her personas are allowed to feel pain, pleasure, and rebirth in opposition to the original film’s repression. When Romance Tropical resurface in 2017, Félix reimagined the film once again, this time, adding color to the monochrome film and its white-washed narrative.

The Institute of Fine Arts is also honored to present a rebirth of Félix’s series, Alláfuera. The film and accompanying pieces retell the story of The Little Mermaid, following La Sirenita as she travels ashore like her sisters did after their quinceañeros. The tale acts as a parallel to Félix’s own journey of migrating to and working between the United States and Puerto Rico. Caught between worlds, seaweed, sea glass, and salt, La Sirenita discovers alláfuera.

The first public program will be an in-person feature-length debut screening of selected video work from as early as 2014. The one-off screening will unify, for the first time, the expansive narrative of Félix’s video practice including excerpts from her works Alláfuera, Aves de Rapiña, Romance Tropical, Vaivén. The second program will be a virtual panel that puts into conversation Félix, Professor Laura Bravo López from the University of Puerto Rico, film director Mariem Pérez, and Professor Juana Suárez, director of the Moving Image Archive and Preservation Program at NYU.

For further information, please call the Institute of Fine Arts at 212.992.5800.

About Mónica Félix

Mónica Félix (b.1984, Cayey, Puerto Rico) is an interdisciplinary artist, professional photographer, and hathayoga teacher based in Brooklyn, New York since 2010. She has a BA in Communications from the University of Puerto Rico, a Photography Certificate from Pratt Institute, and a Visual Arts MFA from Columbia University. Félix’s work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions at institutions such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museo de Historia, Antropología y Arte at the University of Puerto Rico, and the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico. In 2017, she participated in an art residency in Barcelona where she explored the similarities and contrasts of independence ideals in Puerto Rico and in Catalunya, using self-portraits as her artistic medium. Also in 2017, she was selected to participate in the public art exhibition The Future is Female by SaveArtSpace, in which her objective was to explore and celebrate evolving and intersectional feminist movements with a piece from her 2012 series Reina. Her work focuses on representing the experience of female bodies in migration and a consequential search for identity.

This exhibition was made possible through the generous support of Valeria Napoleone XX.The IFA extends special thanks to the artist for lending her works on view. Lillian Beeson, Laura Sofía Hernández González, Barbie Kim, and Kaylee Moua Nok curated the exhibition. Jason Varone designed the website and Professors Catherine Quan Damman and Christine Poggi provided faculty support.

About the Institute of Fine Arts at NYU

Since 1932 the Institute of Fine Arts has been dedicated to graduate teaching and advanced research in the history of art, archaeology, and conservation. This tradition was enhanced in 2013 when the Institute, revealing the potential of the Duke House’s Beaux-Arts interior as a venue for contemporary art, inaugurated its student-led Great Hall Exhibition program. Acclaimed artists Lynda Benglis, Rachel Harrison, Martha Friedman, Judith Hopf, Jamie Eisenstein, Amy Yao, Sarah Peters, Xaviera Simmons, Cauleen Smith, and Avital Meshi are among those featured to date.

About ValeriaNapoleoneXX

ValeriaNapoleoneXX is an umbrella platform for projects and initiatives working towards increasing the recognition and validation of art practices by female artists through collaborations and partnerships with institutions and individuals in the world of contemporary art.

About ValeriaNapoleoneXXIFA

ValeriaNapoleoneXXIFA is an ongoing commitment to underwrite the Great Hall Exhibition Series at NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts, two solo exhibitions a year focused on the work of female artists.

The source of this news is from New York University

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