Martine Gutierrez
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Martine Gutierrez (born 1989) is an American visual and performance artist. Gutierrez is known for creating artworks that interrogate how identity is formed, expressed, and perceived. The artist has created music videos, billboard campaigns, episodic films, photographs, live performance artworks, and a satirical fashion magazine investigating identity as both a social construct and an authentic expression of self. Gutierrez's artworks have been exhibited in galleries and museums worldwide and were exhibited in the Central Pavilion at the
58th Venice Biennale The 58th Venice Biennale was an international contemporary art exhibition held between May and November 2019. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Ralph Rugoff curated its central exhibition, ''May You ...
.


Education and early exhibitions

Gutierrez received a BFA in printmaking from
Rhode Island School of Design The Rhode Island School of Design (RISD , pronounced "Riz-D") is a private art and design school in Providence, Rhode Island. The school was founded as a coeducational institution in 1877 by Helen Adelia Rowe Metcalf, who sought to increase the ...
in 2012. Following graduation, the artist relocated to New York City. In 2013 Gutierrez's ''Real Dolls'' (2013), a series of photographs depicting the artist's performance of four different life-size sex dolls in various domestic settings, was exhibited alongside Gutierrez's multi-part video ''Martine Pt 1-3'' in the artist's first solo exhibition held at the Ryan Lee Gallery in New York. Images from Gutierrez's ''Real Dolls'' series were shown in ''Disturbing Innocence'', a group exhibition curated by artist
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which took place at the FLAG art Foundation in 2014 and included
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, and
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among others. Gutierrez's ''Real Dolls'' images were also included in the 2015 exhibition ''About Face'' at Dartmouth's
Hood Museum The Hood Museum of Art is owned and operated by Dartmouth College, located in Hanover, New Hampshire, in the United States. The first reference to the development of an art collection at Dartmouth dates to 1772, making the collection among the ol ...
, which explored the various approaches that contemporary artists have used to investigate identity as a culturally constructed phenomenon. The exhibition included works by
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, Nomusa Makhubu,
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, and
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. In 2014 Gutierrez created the photographic series ''Lineups'', which features the artist dressed and posed to blend seamlessly with groupings of glamorous female mannequins Gutierrez staged in highly stylized tableaux. Discussing ''LineUps'' with art critic Hilarie Sheets, Gutierrez states, "This body of work was my first inclination in realizing that I wanted to be seen as a woman." Miss Rosen who interviewed Gutierrez about the ''LineUps'' series writes, "Martine embodies some of the most seductive and alluring images of the feminine, revealing the ways in which the body becomes the work of art itself, ready to be cast in the shape of our ideals." Gutierrez's 2015 exhibition at Ryan Lee Gallery, ''Martín Gutierrez: Can She Hear You'', included photographs, an installation of disassembled mannequins, paintings, and music videos, all of which Gutierrez produced. 2015 was the last year in which Gutierrez was published identifying with male or gender neutral pronouns before transitioning to female pronouns. Through experimentation with various artistic techniques and processes, Gutierrez's artworks inspire and ignite a multitude of conversations relating to complex social topics and issues. In a 2018 Vice Magazine interview with the artist, Miss Rosen notes, "Gutierrez uses art to explore the intersections of gender, sexuality, race, and class as they inform her life experience. The Brooklyn-based artist uses costume, photography, and film to produce elaborate narrative scenes that combine pop culture tropes, sex dolls, mannequins, and self-portraiture to explore the ways in which identity, like art, is both a social construction and an authentic expression of self."


''#MartineJeans''

''#MartineJeans'' (2016) was a 10 foot by 22 foot fictional advertisement Gutierrez produced for a billboard at the corner of 37th Street and 9th Avenue in New York City in December 2016. Completed during the artist's Van Lier Fellowship in residence at ISCP, Gutierrez's public art project was created with support from the New York Community Trust, Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and the New York State Council on the Arts. The billboard portraying the artist topless, wearing only denim jeans, was designed by Gutierrez to look like a real advertising campaign for a high-end fashion brand featuring the artist performing the role of the supermodel. Interviewed about the project, Gutierrez stated, "I am using the mechanisms of billboard advertising and marketing color schemes to host performances of non-binary gender representation in a consumable way. To the unsuspecting eye, JEANS is a real billboard that puts forth an existing product by a seemingly cis woman—it’s all very stealth." For Gutierrez, the project allowed the artist to claim "my body and how I could use it, project it outwards." Gutierrez reveals, "I inherently have an aesthetic that could be paralleled to fashion imagery or product merchandising; I depend on my constructed fantasies to convince viewers that they should rest on their preconceived notions of what they are seeing. In reality, things aren’t what they appear to be: locations are sets, people are mannequins, I was not born female." Gutierrez's interest in producing a body of work continuing the concept of ''#MartineJeans'' evolved into the artist's acclaimed satirical fashion magazine ''Indigenous Woman'' (2018).


''Girlfriends''

''Girlfriends'' (2014) is a series of black-and-white photographs throughout which Martine Gutierrez poses with a single mannequin, creating ambiguous characters within changing realities. Composed and shot in upstate New York at the cottage of Gutierrez’s grandmother, the photographs depict three different couples, each of whom Gutierrez appears to match with her mannequin counterpart. Gutierrez’s utilization of mannequins is apparent in ''Girlfriends'', as with many of her artworks. Historically, during the mid-1960s, the form of the mannequin experienced an artistic change in which it was used to  "…convey a feeling of overwhelming reality, convincing spectators…that they may be standing next to a real person. This illusion would be achieved by suggesting movement through pose and through the display artist's staging of the mannequin in a way that felt ‘real’." Commenting on her usage of the medium, Gutierrez emphasizes the idealistic aspect of mannequins, stating "‘Mannequins very succinctly represent the artificial, especially in materiality, when compared to the imperfect reality of the human body…But in coaxing the viewer’s misinterpretation, misleading with light and guise, I am looking for the place where those two worlds meet.’"


''Indigenous Woman''

''Indigenous Woman'' (2018) is a 146-page art publication (masquerading as a glossy fashion magazine) celebrating "Mayan Indian heritage, the navigation of contemporary indigeneity, and the ever-evolving self-image," according to the magazine's "Letter From the Editor" written by Gutierrez. "Mine is a practice of full autonomy," Gutierrez states. "All photography, modeling, styling, makeup, hair, lighting, graphic design, and product design, I have executed myself." The art critic Andrea K. Scott writes of the project, "The agazine’sfront and back covers are clearly modeled on Andy Warhol’s
Interview magazine ''Interview'' is an American magazine founded in late 1969 by artist Andy Warhol and British journalist John Wilcock. The magazine, nicknamed "The Crystal Ball of Pop", features interviews with celebrities, artists, musicians, and creative thinke ...
, down to the jagged cursive font that spells out the title. Inside, a hundred and forty-six pages are filled with Vogue-worthy fashion spreads—and the ad campaigns that make them possible—featuring Gutierrez playing the roles of an entire agency’s worth of models. In addition to posing, utierrezalso took every picture, styled every outfit, and designed all the layouts." By deliberately employing strategies of image making used in the fashion and advertising worlds, Gutierrez states, "I am pioneering an image that is to be consumed and engineered to be read as commercial. I had to study the visual language of advertising." "I was driven to question how identity is formed, expressed, valued, and weighed as a woman, as a trans woman, as a Latinx woman, as a woman of indigenous descent, as a femme artist and maker," Gutierrez stated in her editor's letter. In a 2018 interview with Vice discussing the making of Indigenous Women, Gutierrez notes, "I’m asking what signifies a real, authentic, native-born woman? It’s a critique and a simultaneous investigation of what claim over these labels, stereotypes, and iconographies I have." An artist must assume many roles as they experiment with inspiration and creativity and Gutierrez has been seen assuming many throughout the creative process,"Here, Gutierrez assumes the role of editor, writer, model, designer, ad executive, and photographer, with fictional advertising and high-fashion spreads where the artist continually reinvents herself throughout its pages. As the artist states, "Indigenous Woman marries the traditional to the contemporary, the native to the post-colonial, and the marginalized to the mainstream in the pursuit of genuine selfhood, revealing cultural inequities along the way. This is a quest for identity. Of my own specifically, yes, but by digging my pretty, painted nails deeply into the dirt of my own image I am also probing the depths for some understanding of identity as a social construction." For her FOCUS exhibition, the artist will present photographs from the Indigenous Woman series.


Other work

The artist's music has been used by
Dior Christian Dior SE (), commonly known as Dior (stylized DIOR), is a French Luxury goods, luxury fashion house controlled and chaired by French businessman Bernard Arnault, who also heads LVMH, the world's largest luxury group. Dior itself holds ...
and
Acne Studios Acne Studios is a multidisciplinary luxury fashion house based in Stockholm, Sweden that specializes in men's and women's ready-to-wear fashion, footwear, accessories and denim. When founded in 1996, the label derived its name from the creative co ...
in video editorials, and Saint Laurent set its 2012 resort collection video to the artist's single "Hands Up." In 2014, the artist's site-specific large-scale video installation RedWoman91 (2014), featuring Gutierrez posing in an "advertising red" jumpsuit, exuding "withering sexual power alternating with hesitant vulnerability", was installed in the windows of Ryan Lee Gallery New York, positioned to be visible to those walking on the Highline. Gutierrez collaborated with
i-D magazine ''i-D'' is a British bimonthly magazine published by Vice Media, dedicated to fashion, music, art and youth culture. ''i-D'' was founded by designer and former ''Vogue'' art director Terry Jones in 1980. The first issue was published in the for ...
in 2015, co-directing a music video with musician SSION that stars the artist alongside mannequins dressed in costumes by French designer
Simon Porte Jacquemus Simon Porte Jacquemus (born 16 January 1990) is a French fashion designer and the founder of the Jacquemus fashion label. Early life Jacquemus was born in Salon-de-Provence, France into a relatively poor family of farmers; his father occasional ...
. The video titled ''The Girl For Me'' accompanies original music written and produced by Gutierrez. Beginning as an installation commissioned by Aurora in 2015, Gutierrez produced and performed in collaboration with musician Nomi Ruiz in ''Origin'', a digitally streaming selfie performance simultaneously filmed in-front of a live audience. The music, produced by Gutierrez originally written for Ruiz to perform, also titled ‘Origin’ was released on iTunes in 2018. Gutierrez states, "By talking about our ‘origin’, I felt like I could confront bigotry and stereotypes but still tempt listeners to challenge their social constructs of what femininity or identity means to them." Gutierrez's nine-part film ''Martine Part I-IX'' (2012-2016) dismantles gender identity through a semi-autobiographical story of the artist's personal transformation. Gutierrez spent six years creating the work and premiered the final segment in 2016 in the artist's solo exhibition ''WE & THEM & ME'', at the Contemporary Art Museum, Raleigh, North Carolina. The film was also exhibited in Gutierrez's solo exhibition True Story held at the Boston University Art Gallery in 2016. Filmed in Brooklyn, Tulum, Oakland, and Miami, Gutierrez produced and directed the music video ''Apathy'' (2018) for the artist's song by the same name. In 2019 Gutierrez wrote, produced, and performed in ''Circle'', an immersive live performance series held at
Performance Space New York Performance Space New York, formerly known as Performance Space 122 or P.S. 122, is a non-profitable arts organization founded in 1980 in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan in an abandoned public school building. Origin The former eleme ...
. The sci-fi thriller casts Gutierrez as Eve, an alien held captive by a secret bio weaponry cooperation known as Circle.


Exhibitions and public collections

Guiterrez's artworks were exhibited in the 58th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia, curated by
Ralph Rugoff Ralph Rugoff (born 12 January 1957) is an American-born curator, the director of London's Hayward Gallery since 2006, and the curator of the Venice Biennale in 2019. Rugoff was born in New York City, the son of a film distributor father and a psy ...
. Gutierrez exhibited photographs from ''Indigenous Woman'' including images from the artist's ''Body En Thrall'' and ''Demons'' series. In 2019 the artist's work was presented in the solo exhibitions ''Martine Gutierrez Body en Thrall'' at the
Australian Centre for Photography The Australian Centre for Photography (ACP) is a not-for-profit photography gallery in Darlinghurst, Sydney, Australia that was established in 1973. ACP also provides part-time courses and community programs. It is one of the longest running con ...
, Darlinghurst and ''Life / Like: Photographs'',
Mount Holyoke College Art Museum The Mount Holyoke College Art Museum (established 1876) in South Hadley, Massachusetts, is located on the Mount Holyoke College campus and is a member of Museums10. It is one of the oldest teaching museums in the country, dedicated to providing ...
, South Hadley. Gutierrez's work was included in ''Crack Up - Crack Down'', Ljubljana Biennial of Graphic Arts curated by Slavs and Tartars; ''Kiss My Genders'',
Hayward Gallery The Hayward Gallery is an art gallery within the Southbank Centre in central London, England and part of an area of major arts venues on the South Bank of the River Thames. It is sited adjacent to the other Southbank Centre buildings (the Roy ...
, Southbank Centre, London, UK; ''Transamerica/n: Gender, Identity, Appearance Today'',
McNay Art Museum The McNay Art Museum, founded in 1954 in San Antonio, is the first modern art museum in the U.S. state of Texas. The museum was created by Marion Koogler McNay's original bequest of most of her fortune, her important art collection and her 24-roo ...
, San Antonio, TX; and in ''Be Seen: Portrait Photography Since Stonewall,''
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art The Wadsworth Atheneum is an art museum in Hartford, Connecticut. The Wadsworth is noted for its collections of European Baroque art, ancient Egyptian and Classical bronzes, French and American Impressionist paintings, Hudson River School lands ...
, Hartford, CT which explored how artists have used portrait photography to challenge, subvert, and play with societal norms of gender and sexuality. In 2019, photographs from the artist's ''Indigenous Woman'' series were exhibited in Gutierrez's solo exhibition ''Focus: Martine Gutierrez'' organized by the
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth (widely referred to as The Modern) is an art museum of post-World War II art in Fort Worth, Texas with a collection of international modern and contemporary art. Founded in 1892, The Modern is located in the c ...
,Texas. The installation on view 2019 through 2020 included select images from the series ''Queer Rage'', and several advertisements from ''Indigenous Woman''. Gutierrez also installed a site-specific 15 by 70 foot mural in the gallery depicting a fanciful colonial landscape. Artworks by Gutierrez are in the collections of the
Bowdoin College Museum of Art The Bowdoin College Museum of Art is an art museum located in Brunswick, Maine. Included on the National Register of Historic Places, the museum is located in a building on the campus of Bowdoin College designed by the architectural firm McKim, Me ...
, Brunswick, ME;
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is a museum of American art in Bentonville, Arkansas. The museum, founded by Alice Walton and designed by Moshe Safdie, officially opened on 11 November 2011. It offers free public admission. Overview ...
, Bentonville, AR; Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts, Stanford University, Stanford, CA; The Frances Lehman Loeb Museum, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY; Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX;
Milwaukee Art Museum The Milwaukee Art Museum (MAM) is an art museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Its collection contains nearly 25,000 works of art. Location and Visit Located on the lakefront of Lake Michigan, the Milwaukee Art Museum is one of the largest art museu ...
, Milwaukee, WI;
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth (widely referred to as The Modern) is an art museum of post-World War II art in Fort Worth, Texas with a collection of international modern and contemporary art. Founded in 1892, The Modern is located in the c ...
, Fort Worth, TX;
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. It plays a major role in developing and collecting modern art, and is often identified as one of ...
, New York, NY;
Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art The Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design (RISD Museum) is an art museum integrated with the Rhode Island School of Design, in Providence, Rhode Island, US. The museum was co-founded with the school in 1877, and still shares multiple build ...
, Providence, RI, Kunstmuseum Bonn, the New Museum, New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, the Rose Art Museum, the New Britain Museum of American Art, and Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts.


Publications and commissions

The artist's photograph ''Masking, Starpepper Mask (detail)'' (2018) from ''Indigenous Woman'' (2018) was the January 2019 cover of
Artforum ''Artforum'' is an international monthly magazine specializing in contemporary art. The magazine is distinguished from other magazines by its unique 10½ x 10½ inch square format, with each cover often devoted to the work of an artist. Notabl ...
. The artist's photograph ''Demons, Tlazoteotl, Eater Of Filth'' from ''Indigenous Woman'' (2018) was the cover of RISDXYZ, print Spring/Summer 2019. Gutierrez's series ''Showgirls Of The Mountains'' was commissioned for
Swarovski Swarovski (, ) is an Austrian producer of glass based in Wattens, Austria, and has existed as a family-owned business since its founding in 1895 by Daniel Swarovski. The company is split into three major industry areas: the Swarovski Crystal ...
Book of Dreams, print Volume 3, 2019, features original Swarovski crystal jewelry designed by Gutierrez in collaboration with Michael Schmidt. A suit of self-portraits of Gutierrez titled ''Xotica'' created in Tulum Mexico, was a feature for
Garage Magazine ''Garage'' is a biannual publication dedicated to contemporary art and fashion. It was founded by Dasha Zhukova in 2011. Its name comes from the Garage Museum of Contemporary Art in Moscow, which Zhukova opened in 2008. A Russian-language editio ...
, print Issue 16, 2019.
Interview Magazine ''Interview'' is an American magazine founded in late 1969 by artist Andy Warhol and British journalist John Wilcock. The magazine, nicknamed "The Crystal Ball of Pop", features interviews with celebrities, artists, musicians, and creative thinke ...
commissioned group portraits of Gutierrez and the artist's friends, titled ''Catfight'', print April 2019. The fashion shoot styled by Gutierrez is documented in a behind the scenes video. Gutierrez comments in Interview, "Magazines and advertising and now, more than ever, social media, are the codes that the next generation is learning from. Being a trans woman of color, it’s like, no shade, but don’t just invite us in. Give us marginalized folks autonomy over our own image so that we can at least voice our own ideas instead of them being appropriated by the mainstream."


Personal life

Gutierrez was born April 16, 1989 in Berkeley, California and moved to Vermont during high school. Gutierrez is of blended ancestry—the artist has an American mother and a Guatemalan father. The art critic Barbara Calderon writes of Gutierrez's personal identity, "The art, fashion, and media worlds use terms like Latinx, indigenous, trans, queer, and bi-racial to describe utierrez but these labels often function as reductive shorthand for a range of experiences." Gutierrez has stated, "Language never seemed like a way to clarify who I was. I was afraid of getting roped into a category or being pigeon-holed." "For a long time I have been living fluid concepts of gender with an awareness that the space between the binaries is the only place to find complete freedom. I didn’t want to necessarily hit people over the head with these themes. I wanted the viewer to walk away with some new awareness about their own perceptions of gender and sexual reality—and I still feel this way. In a 2018 interview Gutierrez states, "My authenticity has never been to exist singularly, whether in regard to my gender, my ethnicity, or sexual orientation. My truth thrives in the gray area, but society doesn’t yet allow an open consciousness to celebrate ambiguity, and we are told who we should be. But it’s up to you to consider everything and be open, otherwise how will you know if your life is real or just a reenactment?" Martine Gutierrez joined the social media platform Instagram in the year 2013; the account’s first photographic post to the media was on September 18, 2013. Gutierrez uses this platform, as well as many other social media platforms, to inspire other artists, beginner or advanced, to be creative through regular postings of previous artworks made, current artworks that are currently being processed, and first-hand looks into the life of Martine Gutierrez. In Gutierrez’s first handful of posts, the photos had limited captions and left the viewer guessing. However, Gutierrez has since used Instagram as a platform to involve followers in previous pieces, such as Indigenous Woman, etc., quoting from Indigenous Woman, Body En Thrall, 2018, reminiscing and continuing to keep the ideas within this artistic process flowing and relative to today’s issues and discussion topics, "While our social power structure perpetuates the lineage of historical oppression and conquest, presented is a contemporary reorientation of idealized bodies whose oppression is nuanced through intimacy and inequality. One of the oldest storytelling conventions—the white male adventurer who "discovers" the indigenous women i.e. fertile land—has been endlessly employed in mainstream media via science fiction, Disney and Anime, often down-playing colonialism as the force that propels the narrative. Without fail, these romantically-charged narratives are driven by the temptation of the exotic, brown, female body," says Gutierrez on her Instagram post caption on October 12, 2020. ''Instagram'' The artist currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Gutierrez, Martine 21st-century American women artists 21st-century American artists American contemporary artists American women performance artists American performance artists 1989 births Living people