Lisa AlvaradoLisa Alvarado (born 1982) is an American visual artist and harmonium player.[1][2] She is known for her free-hanging abstract paintings.[3] Her works operate as stage sets and artworks simultaneously, and engage with abstraction beyond the parameters of western art history.[4] Alvarado's paintings accompany musical performances as mobile setting for the band Natural Information Society, for which she plays harmonium.[5] Early life and educationAlvarado was born in San Antonio, Texas to a Mexican American family.[6][7] She studied at San Antonio College and The School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[7] Alvarado joined the Natural Information Society in 2010.[8][9] Artistic practiceAlvarado's practice bridges visual art and sound to create works that explore the possibilities and nuances of abstraction.[4][10] She began making her free-hanging works in 2010, as portable sets for the band Natural Information Society, an experimental ensemble of traditional and electronic instruments.[11] Her two-sided works float between categories—they are at once paintings, screens and tapestries that create airy partitions, delineating pathways, evoking both theatrical and ceremonial uses.[11][12][13] Alvarado's hand-painted compositions consist of sequences that suggest foundational real-world materials: bricks, religious icons, single-celled organisms, the organic systems covering the natural information of life—things of which history and culture are formed.[12][14] Alvarado's works recall a number of traditions, among them Mexican textiles and European and American Modernist painting, however they build on those sources to become something of their own.[10] Hybridity and in-betweenness are central to Alvarado's practice.[10] Her work calls attention to the idea of mestizaje, which refers to the cultural and ethnic mixing in Mexican history, and is expanded to mean a mixing of ideas and materials as a way to resist or bridge cultural and conceptual divides.[15] Exhibitions and performancesAlvarado's work is included in the Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet as It's Kept, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.[1] She has also exhibited her work at the Bergen Kunsthall, Norway; Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Bridget Donahue, New York; The Modern Institute, Glasgow; KMAC Museum, Louisville. [16][17] Selected performances include Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Pitchfork Music Festival, Chicago; Big Ears Music Festival, Knoxville; Rewire Festival, Netherlands; Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; Japan Society, New York; The Common Guild, Glasgow; Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, Portugal.[18][19] Alvarado is represented by Bridget Donahue in New York.[20] Discographywith Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society
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