Regina José Galindo
Regina José Galindo is a visual artist and poet whose main medium is performance. Galindo lives and works in Guatemala, using its own context as a starting point to explore and accuse the ethical implication of social violence and injustices related to gender and racial discrimination, as well as human rights abuses arising from systemic inequalities in power relations of contemporary societies. Galindo is, in Loris Romano’s words, “an artist who pushes herself beyond her own limits, through performances which are radical, unsettling, and ethically discomfiting.”
Galindo received the Golden Lion for a Promising Young Artist in the 51st Venice Biennale (2005) for her works ¿Quién puede borrar las huellas? and Himenoplastia, which critique Guatemalan violence arising from misconceptions of morality and gender discrimination while demanding the restitution of the memory and humanity of the victims. In 2011 she was awarded the Prince Claus Award from the Netherlands for her ability to transform injustice and outrage into powerful acts that demand a response. She has also participated in the 49th, 53rd, and 54th Venice Biennials; Documenta 14 in Athens and Kassel; the 9th International Biennial of Cuenca; the 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana; the Shanghai Biennial (2016); the Biennial of Pontevedra in 2010; the 17th Biennial of Sydney; the 2nd Biennial of Moscow; the First Triennial of Auckland; the 1st Biennial of Art and Architecture of the Canarian islands; the 4th Biennial of Valencia; the 3rd Biennial of Albania; the 2nd Biennial of Prague; and the 3rd Biennial of Lima.