Maria Gainza
Argentine art critic and writer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maria Gainza (born December 25, 1975, Buenos Aires) is an Argentine art critic and writer.[1]
She is a granddaughter of Alberto Gainza Paz, who was director of the newspaper La Prensa.
She began publishing her first articles about art for newspapers and cultural supplements in 2003.She has been a regular contributor to Artforum magazine for more than ten years. She also wrote in the Radar supplement of the newspaper Página/12. She has taught courses for artists at the Center for Artistic Research and art criticism workshops at Torcuato di Tella University.[2] In 2017, she won the Konex Award in the Visual Arts category.[3]
She was co-editor of the collection on Argentine art "Los Sentidos", by Adriana Hidalgo Editora.
Optic Nerve (Spanish: El nervio óptico, published in 2014 by Editorial Mansalva), her first foray into narrative, has been translated into ten languages.[4][5]
In 2018, she published The Black Light (Spanish: La luz negra, published by Editorial Anagrama), a detective novel that deals with the art market and forgery through the lives of four women.[6] In 2019 she was awarded the Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize for the novel.[7]
Literary works
Novels
- Optic Nerve (Catapult Press, 2022, trans. by Thomas Bunstead)
- Portrait of An Unknown Lady (Catapult Press, 2022, trans. by Thomas Bunstead)
Poetry
- Un imperio por otro (Editorial Mansalva, 2021)
Essays
- Textos elegidos 2003-2010 (Capital Intelectual, 2011)
- Una vida crítica (Clave Intelectual, 2020)