Rimer Cardillo

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Born (1944-08-17) 17 August 1944 (age 81)
Montevideo, Uruguay
OccupationsPlastic artist, engraver
Awards
Rimer Cardillo
Born (1944-08-17) 17 August 1944 (age 81)
Montevideo, Uruguay
Alma materNational Institute of Fine Arts [es]
OccupationsPlastic artist, engraver
Awards
Websitewww.rimercardillo.com

Rimer Cardillo (born 17 August 1944) is a Uruguayan visual artist and engraver of extensive international experience who has lived in the United States since 1979.

Rimer Cardillo graduated from the National Institute of Fine Arts [es] of Uruguay in 1968.[1] He completed postgraduate studies in East Germany at the Weißensee School of Art and Architecture [de] in Berlin and at the Leipzig School of Graphic Art [de] between 1969 and 1971.[2]

Cupí degli Uccelli, Uruguay pavilion at the Venice Biennale, 2001
Anacahuita, la pimienta de los pobres, installation, Fernando García Ponce Museum [es], México, 2014

Teaching work has been present in his artistic career since the 1970s in the Montevideo Engraving Club [es] and several workshops in Uruguay and the United States.[1] He has been a teacher of artists who have managed to develop solid personal careers such as Gladys Afamado, Margaret Whyte, and Marco Maggi. He conducts training workshops on graphic techniques in Montevideo every year, as well as curating exhibitions in Uruguay and abroad, in the quest to revalue engraving as a creative discipline and a platform for contemporary expression for the new generations of artists in his country.[3]

He is a tenured professor at the State University of New York at New Paltz, where he is responsible for the direction of the graphic arts department.[4]

In 1997 he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[5] In 2001 he represented Uruguay at the Venice Biennale. In 2002 he received the Figari Award in recognition of his career.[6] In 2004 he was awarded the Chancellor's Award and the Prize for Artistic and Scientific Research. He exhibited at the Binghamton University Art Museum (2013) and the Medieval Trinitarian Templespace of the Kiscell Museum, Budapest, Hungary (2010), among other outstanding museums and galleries in various countries.

In 2003 he was invited by the Tate Modern in London to give a conference and present a video about his creations.[7] In 2004 the Samuel Dorsky Art Museum of SUNY New Paltz organized the first retrospective of Cardillo's work. In 2011, the Nassau County Museum of Art in Long Island held the retrospective exhibition "Jornadas de la memoria", which included works by the artist over four decades.[1][8]

Work

References

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