Catalina Ouyang
Catalina Ouyang is an American sculptor and installation artist who lives and works in New York City. CareerOuyang's sculptures often incorporate atypical materials, from horse tibias and cigarette butts to a replica of a trench toilet in its entirety.[2][1] The disparate objects explore trauma, memory, and the corporeal.[1] Ouyang has cited Anne Carson, Anne Sexton, Marguerite Duras, Marisa Merz, and Louise Bourgeois as inspirations for their work.[3][1][4] Notable exhibitionsOuyang had a solo exhibition, organized by Alexis Wilkinson, at the Knockdown Center in New York in 2020. This included recent sculptures by Ouyang as well as a video installation presenting text transcribed from the artist's project "Conclusion and Findings," in which Ouyang invited artists and writers to respond to a legal document.[5] In 2021 Ouyang had a solo exhibition titled The Siren at Real Art Ways in Hartford, CT.[6] SculptureCenter included Ouyang in its 2021 iteration of the annual InPractice exhibition, You may go, but this will bring you back curated by Katherine Simóne Reynolds.[7] Awards and residenciesOuyang was a Smack Mellon Artist in Residence in Brooklyn, NY from 2020-2021. They have also attended residencies at the NARS Foundation in Brooklyn in 2015, OBRAS Foundation in Evora Monte, Portugal in 2016, Atlantic Center for the Arts in New Smyrna Beach, FL in 2016, Mary Sky in Hancock, Vermont in 2017, Shandaken: Storm King, New Windsor, NY in 2019, and the Vermont Studio Center in 2022. [8][9][10][5][3][11][12] Ouyang has received awards such as the CURA Prize in 2015, Oklahoma Visual Arts Coalition FOCUS selected artist honorarium in 2016, the Emergency Grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts in 2020, the Santo Foundation Individual Artist Award in 2019, the Puffin Foundation Grant in 2019, the Real Art Award from Real Art Ways in Hartford, CT in 2019.[8][12] Public collectionsOuyang has three sculptures in the Nasher Sculpture Center collection. Their 2022 film "Strange Attractor" is in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum and High Museum of Art. Other permanent collections include the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Columbus Museum of Art, Perez Art Museum Miami, Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University, Kadist Foundation, Pond Society, X Museum, and Faurschou Foundation.[13] References
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