Series 16:
Who I Also Am
2004
Produced entirely on the computer, this series
has its beginnings in an exhibition of digital photography
commissioned by the Eusko Etxea in New York and promoted
and curated by EE president Luis Foncillas. Called The woods of
Aranzazu, the exhibition included digital photographs of the
woods behind the Basilica at Aranzazu, a building I have always
greatly appreciated, because it is an artwork containing art. The
photographs were computer enhanced to turn most of them
into highly colorful images, a more abstract style replacing the
realist one.
In my desire to express my identifi cation with nature,
with the innermost structure of nature, I created this other series,
Who I Also Am, by “penetrating” tiny parts of the photographs
of the woods, feeling myself part of it, feeling myself an integral
part of nature.
Inés Medina - “The Woods of Aranzazu”
October 4 - December 31
Euzko Etxea of New York
Open: Sundays, 1p.m. - 6 p.m.
Opening reception: Saturday, Oct. 4th 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.
“Ignition” Digital Photo Photograph
EXHIBITION OF THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF INES MEDINA
TO MARK THE 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE EUSKO
ETXEA, NEW YORK
From 4 October to 31 December, Eusko Etxea, New
York presents an exhibition of photographs by Bilbao artist Inés
Medina entitled “The Woods of Aranzazu”. This is a collection
of digital images taken from the life, retouched on the computer
and printed on photographic paper.
Nature has always held an irresistible attraction for
Inés Medina.
“When I was a child”, she recalls, “I lived in a
small area of Galdácano, up on a low hill. To get to school I
had three options: walk down a huge fl ight of steps, use an
asphalted path or cross, at the trot, the part of the wood that
is still there today. I almost always chose the third way, whichprovided some of my most existential, romantic and mysterious
moments. At a particular spot in the wood, I built a sort of hut
to house a child’s horse (a branch with a cord attached) which
I used to trot downhill through the wood, before getting to
school.”
In July and August, Inés Medina returned to the hills
and mountains of the Basque Country. The emotion she felt at
the sheer attraction of and pleasure in the spectacle of nature
provided by the Basque hills stimulated her to photograph what
she saw. Back in New York, she became fully aware of her
need to retain and relive the sensations and visions of nature. It
was the visual-cum-metaphysical experimentation she needed
to prepare her current artworks, which Inés defi nes as “the
analysis of visual and emotional experimentation to transcend
the spaces perceived as metaphysical oriented towards the
necessary demystifi cation of the projections made on them, for
the sake of a more genuine spirituality, one that can be accepted
as truly human.”
The photographs on view at the Eusko Etxea New
York, which celebrates its 90th anniversary on 12 October, are
the expression of this transcendent feeling, while also being an
immediate contact, through computer-generated retouching of
the images of nature, of the projections made on nature, with
something that is spiritual or transcendent.
A PhD from and former lecturer at the University
of the Basque Country Fine Arts Faculty, Inés Medina is today
a professional contemporary artist very much committed to
theoretical and practical explorations of art. Besides exhibiting
in the Basque Country and Madrid, she now lives and works
in New York, exhibiting at private galleries and other exhibition
venues such as the Bronx River Art Center and Gallery, the
United Nations and the New York University gallery.
Series 16 Gallery
|