Jason Villegas
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- Leslie Lohman Museum of Queer Art, Artist Fellowship
- Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Workspace Studio
- Socrates Sculpture Park, Emerging Artist Fellowship
Jason Villegas | |
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Jason Villegas at Lower Manhattan Cultural Council | |
| Born | August 16, 1977 |
| Education | Mason Gross School of the Arts |
| Known for | Queer art, Ceramics, Sculpture, and Installation Art |
| Awards |
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| Website | www |
Jason Villegas (born August 16, 1977 in Houston, TX[1]) is a San Francisco based contemporary artist. He has exhibited across the United States and internationally. Villegas' work includes sculpture, installation, painting, drawing, textile, video and performance, exploring concepts such as globalism, evolution, sexuality, cosmology, and consumerism.[2] Motifs in Villegas' artworks include fashion logos, animal hybrids, weaponry, sales banners, clothing piles, anuses, cosmic debris, taxidermy, bear men, amorphous beasts, religious iconography, and party scenarios.
Villegas earned his MFA in 2007 at the Mason Gross School of Art at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ and his BFA in 2003 at the University of Houston in Texas.[citation needed]
Awards
- Leslie Lohman Museum of Queer Art, Artist Fellowship (2019)
- Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Workspace Studio (2010)
- Socrates Sculpture Park, Emerging Artist Fellowship (2010)
- Vermont Studio Center, Nadine Goldsmith Fellowship (2007)
- Artadia Houston, Grant Finalist (2004) [3]
Phantom Sightings
Jason Villegas was a part of the traveling group exhibition Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement, curated by Rita Gonzales, Howard Fox, and Chen Noriega. Beginning at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) in 2008, the exhibit toured for two years including renowned spaces such as, the Tamayo Museum in Mexico City, El Museo del Barrio in New York City, the Phoenix Art Museum (PAM) in Arizona, Museo de Arte de Zappopan in Guadalajara, and the Museo Alameda in San Antonio. His selected work "Celestial Situation" (2006) featured a wall mural of painting and drawing depicting planetary spheres of cosmic clutter involving a video projection of animated 2D artworks onto a drawing of compressed entertainment electronics and media. The animation reveals a consumption cosmology of anuses, amorphous beasts, and a rotund man watching television.