American artist
Rose Salane (born 1992) is an American conceptual artist and curator.[ 1] She lives and works in New York City.[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
Early life and education
Rose Salane was born in 1992 in Queens , New York City.[ 8] She is of Peruvian and Italian descent.[ 5] Salane graduated from LaGuardia High School .[ 8]
She received a BFA degree in 2014 from Cooper Union ;[ 8] [ 9] followed by a MA degree in 2019 in urban planning at the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture, City College of New York .[ 10] She was a student of Michael Sorkin .[ 10]
Artistic practice
Salane is a conceptual artist who works in a spectrum of mediums, from sculpture to collage.[ 11] [ 12] Her work has a research component that investigates the past, often excavating through personal and bureaucratic archives and collections to better understand peoples movement through an urban environment.[ 13] [ 10]
Exhibitions
In 2016, Salane co-curated, with Dylan Kraus, a group show titled: ''TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING'' presented at Basilica Hudson ; the exhibition featured artists Antonia Kuo, William Stone, Donald Baechler , Dylan Kraus, Elizabeth Jaeger, Haley Josephs, Joey Palermo, Kayla Guthrie, Keegan McHargue , Lance De Los Reyes, Marwan Makki, Patrick Higgins, Rita Ackermann , Rose Salane, Ry Fyan, Tauba Auerbach , Vanessa Leiva Santos, Wade Oates.[ 1]
In 2019, Salane had a one person show at the MIT List Visual Arts Center .[ 11] In 2021, her project C21OWO was presented at The Hessel Museum, Bard .[ 14] Salane participated in the 2021 edition of the New Museum Triennial .[ 15] In 2022, Salane participated in the 2022 Whitney Biennial curated by Adrienne Edwards and David Breslin.[ 16] [ 17] [ 18]
References
^ a b Nunes, Andrew (July 30, 2016). "Artists Flex Their Curating Chops in a Massive Warehouse Show" . Vice . Retrieved 2022-05-27 .
^ "Watching New York City Take Shape at Windows on the World" . The New Yorker . 2018-07-06. Retrieved 2022-03-19 .
^ "CURA. 37 After Language / Post Society OUT NOW" . CURA . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ "Marfa #17" . magma-shop.com . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ a b "Three emerging Latina artists trace the connection to the 'Radical Women' before them" . Document Journal . 2018-05-25. Retrieved 2022-01-25 .
^ Furlong, Adriana (2021-05-04). "Rose Salane: C21OWO" . The Brooklyn Rail . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ "Rose Salane Illuminates Subjectivity in Systems" . www.culturedmag.com . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ a b c "Energy Potential in Lost Objects: Rose Salane" . Mousse Magazine and Publishing . Retrieved 2022-01-25 .
^ "The Collection | Rose Salane" . The Cooper Union . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ a b c Ozer, Samantha (May 2022). "Faith, Place and Chance: Rose Salane's Lost Objects Fill in the Gaps of History" . PinupMagazine.org . Retrieved 2022-05-27 .
^ a b Reynolds, Pamela (April 23, 2019). "At MIT, Rose Salane Unspools The Personal And The Political Like A Librarian" . Wbur.org . Retrieved 2022-04-04 .
^ Mickleburgh, Elliot (May 10, 2018). "Rose Salane: All of the Events are True, But None of Them Happened" . The Seen . Retrieved 2022-04-04 .
^ Palomino, Camila (Fall 2021). "Portrait: Rose Salane". Cura . 37 : 265– 268.
^ Kelly, Brian P. (2022-04-04). " 'Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet as It's Kept' Review: A Staging That Mutes Its Merits" . Wall Street Journal . ISSN 0099-9660 . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ "New Museum Triennial Announces Artists for 2021 Edition" . www.artforum.com . Retrieved 2022-04-04 .
^ Kelly, Brian P. (2022-04-04). " 'Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet as It's Kept' Review: A Staging That Mutes Its Merits" . Wall Street Journal . ISSN 0099-9660 . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ Schjeldahl, Peter (2022-04-01). "A Coherent and Bold Whitney Biennial" . The New Yorker . Retrieved 2022-04-07 .
^ Mitter, Siddhartha (2022-01-25). "Whitney Biennial Picks 63 Artists to Take Stock of Now" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2022-01-25 .
External links