art.wikisort.org - Artist

Search / Calendar

Dario Robleto (born 1972) is an American transdisciplinary artist, researcher, writer, teacher and “citizen-scientist”. His research-driven practice results in intricately handcrafted objects that reflect his exploration of music, popular culture, science, war, and American history.

Dario Robleto
Born1972
EducationB.F.A. '97 The University of Texas at San Antonio
Occupationartist

Early life and education


Robleto was born in San Antonio, Texas, in 1972 and he received his BFA from the University of Texas at San Antonio in 1997.


Work


Robleto uses unexpected materials such as melted vinyl records, dinosaur bones, meteorites, glass produced by atomic explosions, lost heartbeat recordings from the 19th century, and he transforms these artifacts from the vast inventory of humanity's collective past into delicately layered objects that are sincere and personal meditations on love, death, eroding memory, and healing.

A self-described “materialist poet,” Robleto emphasizes the relationship between language and materials as a crucial component to his approach. “Liner notes,” usually in the form of a wall label, accompany many of the works, poetically detailing the sources embedded therein. A great appreciator of DJ culture, and a former DJ himself, Robleto considers his work a mixtape or “sampling” of humanity; he remixes forgotten stories and materials and reconstructs them into new artistic forms as a lens to view the future through the past.

Increasingly, Robleto has been participating in activities outside the art world. In 2015 he was appointed Artist in Residence in Neuroaesthetics at the University of Houston's Cullen College of Engineering,[1] and he was invited to co-organize the 2016 International Conference on Mobile Brain-Body Imaging and the Neuroscience of Art, Innovation, and Creativity.,[2] he is co-organizing year 2 of the conference in 2017. In 2015 Robleto and Contreras-Vidal coauthored a scholarly paper titled "Your Brain on Art: Emergent Cortical Dynamics During Aesthetic Experiences”. The study considered “the brain response to conceptual art [as] studied with mobile electroencephalography (EEG) to examine the neural basis of aesthetic experiences.”[3] In February 2016, Robleto was coeditor of "Mobile Brain/Body Imaging and the Neuroscience of Art, Innovation and Creativity" in a special issue of the science journal Frontiers of Human Neuroscience.

Robleto is currently one of six artists in the Artists-in-Residence program at the prestigious SETI Institute[4] in Mountain View, California, and in 2015 he joined a distinguished team of scientists as the artistic consultant on the Breakthrough Initiatives, which is the most extensive effort to find intelligent life beyond Earth to date. Specifically, Robleto will work on the Breakthrough Message project—a multi-national effort that aims to encourage intellectual and technical debate about how and what to communicate if the current search for intelligent beings beyond Earth is successful.


Teaching and lecturing


Robleto has been a visiting artist and lecturer at many universities and institutions including Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts; and the Hubble Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland. In 2013–2014 he served as the California College of the Arts Viola Frey Distinguished Visiting Professor, Oakland, California, and in 2014–2016 he was an artist in residence at Maryland Institute College of Art. Most recently he was appointed as the first Artist-at-Large at Northwestern University's McCormick School of Engineering and Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Evanston, Illinois.[5]


Awards, recognitions, and media


Awards have included the 2004 International Association of Art Critics Award for best exhibition in a commercial gallery at the national level. The exhibition was Roses in the Hospital / Men Are The New Women at Inman Gallery in 2003. In 2007 he was a recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant and in 2009 he was a recipient of the USA Rasmuson Fellowship. Robleto has been a research fellow and resident at institutions such as the Menil Collection (2014); Rice University (2013–14); and the Smithsonian Museum of American History (2011). He served as the 2016 Texas State Artist Laureate, he currently sits on the advisory board at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University and is on the Boston Institute of Contemporary Art Teen Conference Advisory Committee.

Robleto has participated in many residencies including the Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito, California, in 2014; and Artpace, San Antonio, Texas, in 2000. In 2017 he was chosen as an Artist in Residence at the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation.

His work has been profiled in numerous publications and media including Radiolab,[6] Krista Tippet's On Being,[7] the New York Times,[8] and the New York Times Science Section.[9]

Robleto's diptych The First Time, The Heart (First Pulse, Flatline), 2017 was awarded a “Prix de Print” award. The Prix de Print is a bimonthly competition, in which a single work is selected by an outside juror to be the subject of a brief essay. Robleto's diptych recalls the method of the first sphygmograph, a technology that made its first marks in soot using a human hair as a stylus, and the data it produced to suggest the life cycle, from the first pulse to the final flat line. Prix de Print


Selected solo exhibitions


2019

2018

2014

2012

2011

2008

2006

2003


Selected group exhibitions


2019

2018

2017

2016

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2008

2004


Publications: author and co-author


2019

2018

2017

2016

2015

2014

2013

2012

2010

2001

1999


Videos



Selected public collections



Selected catalogues



References


  1. "Three Appointed as Engineering Artists-in-Residence in Neuroaesthetics". UH Cullen College of Engineering. 2015-11-05. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  2. "Schedule". Your Brain on Art Conference. 2015-09-14. Retrieved 2016-01-21.
  3. Kontson, Kimberly L.; Megjhani, Murad; Brantley, Justin A.; Cruz-Garza, Jesus G.; Nakagome, Sho; Robleto, Dario; White, Michelle; Civillico, Eugene; Contreras-Vidal, Jose L. (2015). "Your Brain on Art: Emergent Cortical Dynamics During Aesthetic Experiences". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 9: 626. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2015.00626. PMC 4649259. PMID 26635579.
  4. "SETI AIR: The SETI Institute's Artists in Residence Program | SETI Institute". www.seti.org. Retrieved 2016-01-21.
  5. Block Museum Northwestern Artist at Large, https://www.blockmuseum.northwestern.edu/artist-projects/dario-robleto.html.
  6. "Space".
  7. "DARIO ROBLETO: Sculptor of Memory".
  8. Holley, Joe (2003-04-13). "ART/ARCHITECTURE; Conceptual Artist As Mad Scientist". The New York Times.
  9. Cowen, Ron (2014-12-15). "The Echoes of Hearts Long Silenced". The New York Times.
  10. "Mobile Brain-Body Imaging and the Neuroscience of Art, Innovation and Creativity (Springer Series on Bio- and Neurosystems)", 2019.
  11. Brain Art: Brain-Computer Interfaces for Artistic Expression, May 2019.
  12. Designing for Empathy: Perspectives on the Museum Experience (American Alliance of Museums), May 15, 2019.
  13. At the Crossroads of Art and Science: Neuroaesthetics Begins to Come into Its Own, Leonardo, Volume 52, Issue 1, February 1.
  14. Dario Robleto on Sampling & Manipulating Objects into Art, Accelerate No.2.
  15. Copy, Translate, Repeat: Contemporary Art from the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, Hunter College Art Galleries.
  16. SciArt Initiative, STEAM 2017.
  17. Deployment of Mobile EEG Technology in an Art Museum Setting: Evaluation of Signal Quality and Usability, November 10, 2017.
  18. Dreams, as Faithful as Flames, presented at the 2016 International Conference on Mobile Brain-Body Imaging and The Neuroscience of Art, Innovation and Creativity in Cancun, Mexico.
  19. Honky-Tonks and Hospices, Southern Accent, 2016.
  20. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, November 18, 2015.
  21. If You Remember, I'll Remember, November 10, 2016.
  22. "Lunge For Love As If It Were Air", Originally published in exhibition catalog More Love: ART, POLITICS and SHARING Since the 1990s Ackland Art Museum.
  23. Every Record, Everywhere, Is Playing Our Song Right Now, Originally published in exhibition catalog The Record: Contemporary Art and Vinyl Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University.
  24. “When You Cry, I Only Love You More”, ArtLies Fall 2001.
  25. “I Love Everything Rock ‘n’ Roll (Except the Music),”, The National Association of Artists’ Organizations Field Guide 1999-2000.





Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.

Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.

2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии