
Ochún
<p>Emerging in the early 1970s amid new genres of land art, performance art, film and video, and feminist practices, artist Ana Mendieta developed a deeply personal, experimental, and largely ephemeral oeuvre consisting chiefly of performative actions that she described as “earth-body sculptures.” Born in Cuba, Mendieta came to the United States as a refugee in 1961 at the age of 12. The trauma of separation from her family, culture, and homeland became the bedrock of the artist’s practice, which was rooted in physical and spiritual connections between the body and the natural world. The <em>Silueta</em> series—hundreds of earth-body sculptures and their attendant photographs and films—constitutes the core of Mendieta’s project. Based initially on the artist’s own body and silhouette, the <em>Siluetas</em> developed into a panopoly of archetypal goddess figures and eventually more universal human forms. They also incorporated a unique blend of ritual effects drawn from diverse religious practices in much the same way as studio performances <em>Untitled</em> (Body Tracks) and <em>Untitled (Blood Sign #1)</em>, in which she used animal blood. An intensely productive period of travel to Cuba, where Mendieta felt her practice was reconnected with its origins, promoted these and other drawings, etching, and sculptures in which, for the first, her iconic goddess forms became permanent individual objects.</p>
Catalogue
Artist

Mixed Media
Ana Mendieta (1948-1985) was a groundbreaking Cuban-American artist known for her multi-disciplinary works, including body art, performance pieces, film, and earthworks. Her art, often tied to themes of feminism, identity, and death, was profoundly shaped by her exile from Cuba as a child, leading her to develop her most famous body of work, "Silueta Series." Throughout her oeuvre, she merged her body with the earth to explore cultural displacement and a return to ancestral roots. Mendieta's pioneering career, characterized by its emotive power and confrontation of societal and existential themes, left an indelible mark on the world of contemporary art before her untimely death at 36.
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More by Ana Mendieta
Untitled
1984 · Pencil on leaf
Nile Born
1984 · Sand and binder on wood
Untitled
1984 · Incised leaf
Our Menstruation
1983 · Photo-etching on cream chine, laid down on white wove paper (chine collé)
Untitled [Goddess of Wind]
1983 · Photo-etching on cream chine, laid down on white wove paper (chine collé)
Mother
1983 · Photo-etching on cream chine, laid down on white wove paper (chine collé)
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Ana Mendieta
- Year
- 1981
- Medium
- Single-channel video (transferred from 3⁄4-inch U-Matic videotape), color, sound, 8 min. 17 sec.
- Watts ID
- WW-1981-112956
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified




![Untitled [Goddess of Wind]](/api/images/artworks/aic/181058.jpg)
