Ana Prada

Sabatini Building, Floor 3 (Projects Gallery)
Vista de sala de la exposición. Ana Prada, 1995

Estrella de Diego said that the artist uses "poor and seemingly banal, but symbolic materials to display the feminine universe," with which she composes new forms based on repetition and which create new meanings. From unorthodox and surprising associations (such as clay and a wooden spoon or nails and plastic straws) Prada creates a new order fraught with irony, which generates a very personal poetry. In her pieces, the simplicity of appearance contrasts with the complexity of newly created meanings.

The pieces are both sculptural devices and three-dimensional poetical projects. In most cases they are integrated directly into the wall, eliminating the notion of support or frame giving the exhibition space a sense of spontaneous occupation.

By its very genesis, the artist's work triggers a series of dichotomies derived from the exploration and subversion of the traditional principles of sculpture: figure/depth, object/space and fragility/consistency. Its construction process is based on appropriation and redefinition, causing aesthetic and symbolic tensions.

In Ana Prada’s case, the creative act involves in turn, a destruction of what has been produced, due to the will of the temporality of its parts and the ephemeral nature of some of the materials used. For this reason, part of the pieces shown in this exhibition at the Museo Reina Sofía, will be destroyed after its closure.

activity.description.readmore

Artists

Ana Prada

Organised by

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía