Gustavo Romano
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Gustavo Romano (born 20th century) is an Argentine contemporary artist who works in a variety of media including actions, installations, net art, video and photography.
Born in Buenos Aires, he uses media and technology devices as well as objects belonging to people's daily lives, decontextualizing them and trying to force viewers to think about their routines and preconceptions.
Romano won the Platinum Konex Award from Argentina in 2002, and the Guggenheim Fellowship[1][2] in 2006. He lives and works in Madrid.
One of his projects is Time Notes, which consists of performances of a series of actions using a new money system designed by Romano, with bills based on units of time (bills of sixty minutes, five years, etc.). One of those actions is the Lost Time Refund Office, where officers ask people who are passing by how have they lost their time and refund it with a time bill, at the same time creating a classification and a database of the losses. Since 2004, Romano has performed this piece on the streets of cities, including Berlin, Singapore, Rostock, Vigo,[3] Buenos Aires, Mexico, San Jose, Silicon Valley, Munich, and Madrid.[4][5]
In 2009, he started the project called Psychoeconomy!, an artistic platform for discussion and research, proposing an alternative approach on various global issues. Each edition involves an artist's meeting, a public event and the publication of the resulting conclusions, documents, texts and graphic materials. The first edition was the Corporate Summit 2010, proposed in order to discuss the international financial crisis and prevailing monetary-exchange systems. Four artists (chief executive officers of their own fake corporations), read the Madrid Declaration, at Matadero Madrid.[6] The artists were Daniel García Andújar, Fran Ilich, Georg Zoche and Gustavo Romano.
Exhibitions
Romano has participated in several international events, including Videonale 11, Bonn (2007); the I Biennial of the End of the World, Ushuaia, Argentina (2007); the I Singapore Biennale (2006); the VII Havana Biennial (2000;, the II Biennial of Porto Alegre, Brazil (1999), and the I Biennial of Lima (1997).
He has participated in new media and art in public space festival, including Madrid Abierto (2009–2010),[7] Transitio MX, Mexico (2007); Transmediale, Berlin (2003); Videobrasil (2005) and FILE (2001), São Paulo; Interferences (2000), Montbéliard; and Ars Electronica (1997), Vienna.
In 2008, Romano presented Sabotaje en la Máquina Abstracta[8](Sabotage in the Abstract Machine), a ten–years’ anthological solo show at the MEIAC of Badajoz, Spain.
He has also had solo exhibitions at the Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (MAMBA), the Ruth Benzacar Gallery, Tamayo Museum, Mexico DF, among others.