Tania Bruguera
Visual Arts
2015
Visual Arts
2015
Tania Bruguera
About the Artist
Tania Bruguera

About the Artist

“I see artists as active citizens trained to bring into reality what seems impossible to others .''
Tania Bruguera
 
For Tania Bruguera art should be útil (useful). Always interested in creating performances in an environment that will transform 'the audience' into ‘active citizens,’ she works with the interplay between planned actions and spectators’ spontaneous reactions. The goal: actual – not symbolic – transformation. Her performances engage with issues of social responsibility, art ethics, power and control, political representation, and civil society.
Making videos and installations as well as performances, she appropriates the resources of power to create power, doing this through the means of art. With strong formal clarity and ongoing contribution to international conversations on freedom of speech and illegal immigration, Bruguera is re-inventing the language of activism within the field of contemporary culture.
Tania Bruguera

Artist Statement

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Essays:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Blog excerpt:
 
April 16, 2015, Havana:
 
“In recent days I have gotten the same questions from three different people (which, under these circumstances, stops being a fluke). What do you need to leave Cuba, what would you demand?
 
…I will answer here what I would ask of them [the Cuban government] in order for me to agree to leave Cuba:
 
. A resolution from the Minister of Justice which makes it clear my case is closed and I can enter and leave the country like any other Cuban citizen and what has transpired does not remain as a criminal record or pending case;
 
. That the same apply to Antonio Rodiles and Ailer Gonzalez, who are in the same circumstances and part of the same case;
 
. That the artist El Sexto be released so he can wait on parole for the resolution of his case;
 
. That all my belongings seized by State Security since the day of my arrest be returned to me;
 
. That the parties responsible publicly rectify the defamatory materials disseminated about me and issue an apology from all the institutions involved. 
What would I like to ask? That in Cuba a law be proposed that protects the rights of freedom of expression, based on the penal code, and that decriminalizes difference of opinion and instead criminalizes violence against those who think differently; a law that would allow the right to a difference of opinion and would prohibit discrimination against minorities with different political thinking.
 
Oh… and to let me do the performance without violence, without rapid response brigades, and instead with ordinary Cubans coexisting peacefully, respecting our differences, like the speech Raúl Castro recently delivered at the The Summit of the Americas.”
 
                                         ***

Bruguera, Ch. 1, Image 1

 

Slideshow: Bruguera, Ch. 1, Slideshow 1

 

 

 

Media

Bruguera, Ch. 1, Image 4
Bruguera, Ch. 1, Image 3
Bruguera, Ch.1, Image 5
Bruguera, Ch.1, Image 6
Bruguera, Ch. 2 Image 2
Bruguera, Ch. 2 Image 3
Bruguera, Ch. 2 Image 3
Bruguera, Ch. 2 Image 4
Bruguera, Ch. 2, Image 5
Bruguera, Ch. 1, Image 1