Milagros de la Torre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Milagros de la Torre
Born
NationalityPeruvian-American
EducationUniversity of the Arts London
Known forPhotography, Art
Websitewww.milagrosdelatorre.com

Milagros de la Torre is an artist based in New York.[1]

Her work is a part of the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art[2] in New York. De la Torre was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in Creative Arts - Photography in 2011 and the Smithsonian Artist Fellowship Award in 2021.[3][4]

She is a part of the Advisory Board at the Penumbra Foundation in New York.[5]

Career[edit]

De la Torre is an artist who has been working since the 90s. She immigrated from Peru at an early age to follow her career in London, Paris, Mexico City, and finally settled in New York. [6][7][8] De la Torre was named the Wolf Chair in Photography at the Cooper Union (Fall 2023) , where she gave an artist talk.[9]

She has given artist lectures at New York University Institute of Fine Arts[10], Columbia University, Parsons School of Design[11], New York University[12], the International Center of Photography[13], Pratt Institute, School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts[14], and the School of Visual Arts[15].


Awards and honors[edit]

De la Torre received the Guggenheim Fellowship in 2011,[3] the Dora Maar Fellowship from The Brown Foundation in 2014,[16] the Peter S. Reed Foundation Photography Award in 2016,[17] the "Merited Person of Culture Award" from the Minister of Culture in Peru in 2016, the Sustainable Arts Foundation Residency Grant in 2020, Hundred Heroines in 2021,[18] and the Smithsonian Artist Fellowship Award in 2021.[4]

Collections[edit]

De la Torre's work is part of the following public collections:

Reviews and Articles[edit]



References[edit]

  1. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Pratt Institute. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  2. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". MoMA. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Milagros de la Torre". Guggenheim Foundation.
  4. ^ a b "Smithsonian Announces Its 2021 Artist Research Fellows". Smithsonian.
  5. ^ "About". Penumbra Foundation. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  6. ^ "Interview with Milagros de la Torre". AS/COA. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  7. ^ "Living Cordially with Violence Milagros De la Torre in Conversation with Anne Wilkes Tucker" (PDF). AS/COA. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  8. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Toluca Fine Art. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  9. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Cooper Union. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  10. ^ "Latin American Forum, 2018". IFA Latin America. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  11. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Vimeo. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  12. ^ "CONFIGURING THE NEW LIMA ART SCENE: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY ART IN LATIN AMERICA". NYU Arts & Science. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  13. ^ "ICP Lecture Series 2014: Milagros de la Torre". Youtube. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  14. ^ "SMFA at Tufts". Instagram. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  15. ^ "i3 Lecture with Milagros de la Torre". Vimeo. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  16. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Dora Maar Cultural Center.
  17. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Peter S. Reed Foundation.
  18. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Hundred Heroines.
  19. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Museum of Modern Art.
  20. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Art Institute of Chicago.
  21. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Museum of Fine Art, Houston.
  22. ^ "Milagros de la Torre" (PDF). Blanton Museum of Art.
  23. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Harvard Art Museum.
  24. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Princeton University Art Museum.
  25. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". MIT List Visual Arts Center.
  26. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". El Museo del Barrio.
  27. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". RISD Museum.
  28. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Ruby City.
  29. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". ROLF Art.
  30. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Worcester Art Museum.
  31. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". MOLAA.
  32. ^ "Fonds Art Contemporain". Fonds Art Contemporain.
  33. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Museo Reina Sofia.
  34. ^ a b "Milagros de la Torre". ESCALA.
  35. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Museo de Arte Carillo Gil.
  36. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". MALI.
  37. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes.
  38. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Arte al Dia.
  39. ^ "The art of change". Stanford Report.
  40. ^ "Professor Craig Zammiello Participates in Group Show: 'Photography in Ink'". Columbia University School of the Arts.
  41. ^ "Ruby City Acquires Works by BIPOC Artists, Including Jesse Amado, Rick Lowe, Deborah Roberts & Others". Glasstire.
  42. ^ "Burlas al falo: la obra que el Malba compró en arteBA". Clarín.
  43. ^ "Ramos, de la Torre, and Castro at Artpace San Antonio". Glasstire.
  44. ^ "Malba, pioneer in the digital era: announced virtual purchases at arteBA via Zoom". La Nación.
  45. ^ "Fotografías de Maris Bustamante y Milagros de la Torre ingresan a la Colección". MALBA.
  46. ^ "Artistas peruanos de la colección Hochschild 'dialogan' con Goya o Alonso Cano en Madrid en el marco de ARCO". notiamérica.
  47. ^ "El viejo y nuevo Perú se encuentran en la Colección Hochschild". El Mundo.
  48. ^ "In an Ironic Lens, a Latin Myth Evaporates". New York Times.
  49. ^ "Latin America's Mutating Cities, in Photographs". New York Times.
  50. ^ "Observed: Milagros de la Torre". Jeu de Paume.
  51. ^ "Observed: Milagros de la Torre". The New Yorker.
  52. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Art in America.
  53. ^ "On Photography: Shades of Reality" (PDF). Wall Street Journal.
  54. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Arte al Dia.
  55. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". ArtNexus.
  56. ^ "Milagros de la Torre". Visura.
  57. ^ "Dress Codes". ARTFORUM.
  58. ^ "In Focus: Dressing Up at the ICP". New York Times Style Magazine.
  59. ^ "Étoiles Montantes et Figures Historiques: Le Futures Stars". Beaux Art Magazine.
  60. ^ "Varied Realms Thrive Uptown". New York Times.
  61. ^ "Les miracles de Maria". Beaux Art Magazine.