Cristina Córdova

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Cristina Córdova
Born1976 (1976)
Nationality Puerto Rican
Known forCeramics
Notable work"Bestiario", "Contiguous", "A Show of Heads", "Hacia otro mar", "Paseantes", "Variation", "Mito y Enteanatomia"
AwardsProject 10/10/10- Artist Commission,Permanent Collection, Mint Museum of Craft and Design, Charlotte , NC
Website http://www.cristinacordova.com/

Cristina Córdova (born 1976) [1] is an American-born, Puerto Rican sculptor who works and lives in Penland, North Carolina. [2]

Contents

Primarily working in clay, she focuses her work on expressive, emotional, and sometimes fantastical human figural sculptures. They are inspired by her heritage, gender, politics, and the complexities of human relationships with their surroundings. [2] "Magic realism, the predominantly Latin American literary genre, is physically manifested through the surrealistic environments Córdova's subjects inhabit." [3]

Influenced by the Catholic iconography of her youth in San Juan, Córdova now aims to create figures of her "own pantheon" [4] while trying to emulate a figure representative of and recognizable by her own culture. The sculptures are shown in a variety of poses, expressions, colors, textures, and sizes. Córdova has won many awards, exhibited her work broadly, and her work is owned by both domestic and international museums. [5]

Biography

Córdova was born in Boston, Massachusetts. Her parents were Puerto Ricans completing their studies in Medicine at Harvard University. They returned to Puerto Rico when she was 6 months old. She grew up taking in the rich and layered imagery of the Catholic church. The powerful iconography would come to inspire her work and her view of the world.

Education

Córdova graduated from the Academia del Perpetuo Socorro, Miramar, Puerto Rico in 1994 and earned a Bachelor of Arts and a concentration in Fine Arts from the University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Campus in 1998. During the summer of 1999 she finished courses at Touchtone School of Crafts at the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. That same summer she completed courses at the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Deer Isle, Maine. Later, she began studies as a special student in independent studies at the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. She was supervised by Wayne Higby and Walter McConnell. She earned a scholarship to Alfred University for her master's degree in ceramics in 2000. She earned a Masters of Fine Arts from New York State College of Ceramics. [6]

Career

Córdova was on track to becoming an engineer when she realized that it wasn't for her. She switched to art school, where she could pursue her interest in ceramics. [7] After graduating in 2002 she was selected to serve as a resident artist at Penland School of Crafts. Córdova moved to Penland, North Carolina to participate in the residency in 2002. After completing her residency she and her family made their home and studio on the Penland campus where she maintains her studio and offers workshops.

Work

Arana (2004) by Cristina Cordova at the Renwick Gallery in Washington, DC in 2022 Arana Cristina Cordova 2004.jpg
Araña (2004) by Cristina Córdova at the Renwick Gallery in Washington, DC in 2022

"Córdova doesn't want to be labeled a Puerto Rican artist – or a woman artist, or any type of artist, other than a compelling one – she does believe authenticity can come only from a deeply personal place." [2] Her Afro-Caribbean heritage and her understanding of contemporary and historical influences have impacted her art form. Her knowledge of early Roman life and African sculptures are also reflected in her figures. Among the artists which have impacted her work are Doug Jeck, Judy Fox, Jaime Suarez and Susana Espinosa. [8] She comments about her own work that "we are all taking from a collective creativity." [8]

The human figure is key to her work which has been described as "a compelling strain of magical realism ... laden with ideas of creation, crucifixion and difficult nature of existence." [9] She works primarily with clay but has an interest in working with other mediums. Her moldings recreate various human forms, often female. She has also recreated animal-like creatures. At the abstract level, her figures, represent the struggles in the world of today. Cordóva weaves the past with the present as she creates a place for the viewer to complete the narrative in her work. [9]

“I was born into a household that both challenged and upheld gender archetypes. This simultaneity created a fluid identity in my creative perspective that has moved me to engage with a wide spectrum of narrative embodiments from the sexually untethered and universal to the absolutely feminine. I am human, I am Puerto Rican, I am a woman. Each of these breaks into a thousand fractals that create the prism through which my work comes into the world.” [10] Cordova's more recent description of her work and process shows a coalescence and embracing of heritage and gender.

Córdova's work is in the collection of the Mint Museum Auxiliary, [11] and the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, [12] Her work, Araña, was acquired by the Smithsonian American Art Museum as part of the Renwick Gallery's 50th Anniversary Campaign. [1] [13]

Awards

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Publications

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References

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