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Miguel Luciano speaks into a microphone addressing attendees of a block party celebration.

Miguel Luciano

Artist in Residence, 2017–21

 

Miguel Luciano looks directly at the camera. He has very short and tidy hair. He is leaning against a grey brick wall, and wearing a denim button-down shirt.

Inspired by the question, “Where do we see ourselves at The Met?,” Miguel Luciano’s three-year residency at The Met engaged with Taíno culture, the legacy of the Young Lords, the El Barrio community, and the groundbreaking 1973 exhibition The Art Heritage of Puerto Rico: Pre-Columbian to Present to center the histories and people of Puerto Rico and to increase the visibility of Latinx art and artists at the Museum.

Miguel Luciano is a multimedia visual artist whose work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including in exhibitions at the Mercosul Biennial, Porto Alegre, Brazil; La Grande halle de la Villette, Paris; Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City; the San Juan Poly/Graphic Triennial, Puerto Rico, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC. He is the recipient of numerous grants and awards, including the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation biennial grant and the Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant. He was a fellow of smARTpower—an international, community-based art initiative of the Bronx Museum of the Arts and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the US Department of State. His work is featured in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, El Museo del Barrio, the Newark Museum, and the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico. Luciano is a faculty member of the School of Visual Arts and the Yale School of Art. He received his MFA from the University of Florida.

Photo by Ryan Redcorn

 

Residency Projects


Miguel Luciano’s Cemí-Libre

The culminating event of Miguel Luciano’s residency, Cemí-Libre, showcased his art alongside a replica of a Zemí Cohoba stand at the Galería del Barrio and was followed by a block party celebration featuring performers from the community.

 


Inspirations and Interests from The Met 

Zemí Cohoba Stand

During his residency, Luciano became interested in the Zemí Cohoba Stand made by the indigenous Caribbean Taíno people. The work was scanned in 3D in collaboration with The Met’s Imaging Department and The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing. The scan was then used to make replicas in various materials, which were then shown outside The Met. To the artist, the replica sculpture presents an opportunity to symbolically liberate the artwork from the museum vitrine and reimagine it in the space of a community whose heritage and ancestry it shares.

Learn more about the Zemí Cohoba Stand

The Met Logotype

During his residency, Luciano remixed  The Met logotype into “El Met” as a way of reimagining the Museum through the lens of Spanish-speaking audiences. All proceeds from the sale of “El Met” merchandise directly support the acquisition of Latinx art at the Museum.

Shop The Met Store

The Art Heritage of Puerto Rico: Pre-Columbian to Present

This publication was a 1973 exhibition and catalogue collaboration between The Met and El Museo del Barrio and the first major exhibition to survey the five-hundred-year history of Puerto Rican accomplishment in art.

Read online and download

 

 

Public Programs

 

 

Community Collaborators and Partners

The following collaborators, partners, and supporters engaged with the artist’s work during their residency: 

Classic Riders Schwinn Club   |   Hiram Maristany   |  Fabiola Méndez   |   Los Pleneros de la 21   |   Salud y Acupuntura para el Pueblo (SAPP; Health and Acupuncture for the People)

 

 

Stay Connected

 


The Civic Practice Project is made possible by The William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust.