Margaret Whyte

Margaret Whyte (born 21 February 1940) is a Uruguayan visual artist.[1]

Margaret Whyte
Born (1940-02-21) 21 February 1940
Montevideo, Uruguay
OccupationArtist
Years active1972–present
AwardsFigari Award (2014)
Websitewww.margaretwhyte.com

Career

Margaret Whyte began her artistic activity in 1972 at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in Montevideo. She studied with Clarel Neme, Jorge Damiani, Amalia Nieto, Rimer Cardillo, Hugo Longa, and Fernando López Lage.[2] She has been a member of the Contemporary Art Foundation (FAC) since its inception.[3]

Her work includes paintings, soft sculptures, installations, and interventions.[2] Whyte evokes the memory of the materials she uses – fragments of dresses, tablecloths, and bedspreads bring an intense color to her textile works in which she questions the ideals of beauty and their rituals – as a way to revalue the aesthetic independent of the beautiful.

Her assemblages are accumulations and layers of cut and torn, wrapped, tied, and sewn objects which propose a reflection on the situation of women, beauty, fashion, and their commercial logic.[3]

In 2014 she received the Figari Award in recognition of her career. The jury, composed of Olga Larnaudie, Lacy Duarte, and Enrique Aguerre, cited the extreme uniqueness of her works and the intergenerational reference that she represents in the Uruguayan art world.[4]

Exhibitions

  • Pinturas, Museum of Contemporary Art (MAC), Montevideo, 1992
  • Las cosas mismas, Juan Manuel Blanes Museum, Montevideo, 1995
  • Misterios y ritos, Museo del Gaucho y la Moneda, Montevideo, 1996
  • Cajas de Petri, Sala Vaz Ferreira, Montevideo, 1999
  • Espacios medios, Molino de Pérez, Montevideo, 2001
  • Cuerpos atávicos, Colección Engelman-Ost, 2003[5]
  • Hasta que duela, Cabildo de Montevideo, 2003
  • Pliegues, Subte Exposition Center, 2007[2]
  • Kanga, intervention, CCE elevator, Montevideo, 2008
  • Madame Butterfly, intervention, Solís Theatre staircase, Montevideo, 2009
  • Belleza compulsiva, National Museum of Visual Arts, 2009[6]
  • Lo que queda, Contemporary Art Show, 2012

Awards

  • Acquisition Award, 39th National Salon of Plastic and Visual Arts, 1975
  • Ministry of Tourism Award, 6th Spring Biennale, Salto, 1996
  • Special and Acquisition Award, Centennial Painting Salon of the Banco República, 1997
  • Spring Biennale Award, Salto, 1998
  • Figari Award for Career, MEC-BCU, 2014[4]
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gollark: You stole my code and purported it for evil, <@!341618941317349376>!
gollark: ?coliru```pythonimport mathtext = "no."len = 32amp = 8freq = 0.5for i in range(len): print((" " * int(math.sin(i * freq) * amp + amp)) + text)```
gollark: ?coliru```pythonimport mathtext = "mwahahaha"len = 32amp = 8freq = 0.5for i in range(len): print((" " * int(math.sin(i * freq) * amp + amp)) + text)```
gollark: ?coliru```pythonimport mathtext = "mwahahaha"len = 32amp = 8freq = 1for i in range(len): print((" " * int(math.sin(i * freq) * amp + amp)) + text)```

References

  1. "Margaret Whyte" (in Spanish). National Museum of Visual Arts. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  2. Galería de Búsqueda, Issues 347-355 (in Spanish). Galería de Búsqueda. 2007. p. 84. Retrieved 22 May 2019 via Google Books.
  3. Haber, Alicia (22 September 2012). "Margaret Whyte: la bisabuela irreverente y subversiva creadora de arte joven" [Margaret Whyte: the Irreverent Great-Grandmother and Subversive Creator of Young Art]. El País (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  4. "Premio Figari 2014: Margaret Whyte" (in Spanish). Ministry of Education and Culture. 9 December 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  5. Arte, Issue 4; Issue 6 (in Spanish). APEU Artistas Visuales. 2003. p. 33. Retrieved 22 May 2019 via Google Books.
  6. Centenario del MNAV (in Spanish). National Museum of Visual Arts. 2011. p. 62. Retrieved 22 May 2019 via Google Books.
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