Maye Torres

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Born1960 (age 6465)
Taos, New Mexico
Knownfor
  • Sculpture
  • drawing
Maye Torres
 Close-up of person smiling
Torres in 2014 during a US State Department-sponsored cultural exchange in Ethiopia
Born1960 (age 6465)
Taos, New Mexico
EducationUniversity of New Mexico
Known for
  • Sculpture
  • drawing
Websitemayetorresart.com

Maye Torres (born 1960) is an American artist who specializes in large-scale drawings and sculptures.[1] Raised in New Mexico and Latin America, her work is influenced by the arts, cultures and spiritual beliefs of those areas.[2]

Torres was born in Taos, New Mexico, and is a 13th-generation Taos native.[3] Her father was a rural science educator, and her mother owned the Taos New Direction Gallery.[4] As a family, they moved to various places including El Salvador, Ecuador, and Bolivia, eventually returning to Taos. She said that growing up, "There were a lot of artists around and they were really respected, not treated like bohemians who didn’t want to get a job."[5]

While still in high school, Torres assisted sculptor Ted Egri and had some of her first art showings at Stables Gallery. She later received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of New Mexico with a focus on studio art and science. During her junior year of college, she attended Humbolt State University in Northern California as a National Honors Exchange Student. After her schooling, she apprenticed with painter John Wegner and light-and-space artist Larry Bell in order to learn about cutting-edge media.[5]

Work

Torres has created several public art commissions including a piece for the Workforce Training Center in Albuquerque, which houses her largest public bronze installation to date. Another large-scale bronze sculpture, Untitled Coalminer #1, is one of nine pieces she created for the Miners’ Colfax Medical Center in Raton, New Mexico, and commemorates the hardworking miners who brought electricity to the area.

Torres's work has been exhibited across the Southwest, including the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, the National Hispanic Cultural Center in Albuquerque and the State Capitol in Santa Fe, New Mexico; Longview Museum of Art in Longview, Texas; and in Venice Beach, Palo Alto, San Diego and Downtown Los Angeles, California, as well as Denver, Colorado.[6] Her art is in the private collections around the world, including Moctesuma Esparza, Luis Valdez and Guillermo Gomez-Pena. Her art is also included in collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Arts and the Laguna Art Museum in California and the Mexican Fine Arts Center in Chicago. In 2014, she was selected for the United States Department of State's Art in Embassies program, for which she traveled to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for a cultural exchange and her drawing Samba Pa Ti was exhibited at the residence of U.S. Ambassador Patricia M. Haslach.[4]

Recognition

Personal life

References

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