Pablo Helguera: But the water stayed too long, 2008, 8x10”, collage
The Artlington Heighs Suite is a series of 150 collages made between 2007-2009. The title refers to a suburb in the city of Chicago where some of the artist's family lives and where some of these pieces were made. The works are made from fragments of images from scientific and educational textbooks, mostly from the 1950s and 60s, along with a series of seemingly disjointed texts below that constitute a fragmentary illustrated novel of sorts. Aspects of the biographical, the fragmentation of memory, and general aspects of family and personal relationships are a main topic of this series.
Pablo Helguera (Mexico City, 1971) is a New York based artist working with
installation, sculpture, photography, drawing, and performance. Considering the
relationship between history, cultural production and language, Helguera
fictionalizes the real, generating commentary and discussion about our
surrounding cultural reality and relationship to time. His work often adopts
the format of the lecture, museum display strategies, musical performances and
written fiction. His work as an educator intersected his interest as an artist, making his work
often reflects on issues of interpretation, dialogue, and the role of
contemporary culture in a global reality. Helguera’s work is part of the permanent collection of El Museo del Barrio, New
York, an institution where he has presented a variety of projects through the
years. Helguera has exhibited or performed at venues such as the Royal
College of Art, London; 8th Havana Biennal, PERFORMA 05, Havana; Shedhalle,
Zurich; the Museum of Modern Art /Gramercy
Theater, New York; P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York; Brooklyn Museum; IFA Galerie,
Bonn; Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo; MALBA museum in Buenos Aires,
Ex-Teresa Espacio Alternativo in Mexico City, The Bronx Museum, Artist Space,
and Sculpture Center. His work has been reviewed in Tema Celeste, Art in America,
Artforum, NY Arts Magazine, ArtNews, amongst others. In 2008 he was awarded the
John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and also was the recipient of a 2005 Creative
Capital Grant.