Isolarii, Untitled No.3, 2021
by Liliana Farber
Inkjet print
66.5 x 54.7 inch
Edition of 3 + 2 AP
- Regular price
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$10,000.00 - Regular price
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- Sale price
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$10,000.00
The series Isolarii (2021) combines historic and contemporary cartography to re-create early world maps as data collages. Farber collected a range of imagery for her raw material, which was then ‘woven’ together by custom software to create large-scale artworks. Ghostly patterns evoking early visualisations of the globe emerge from this technically laborious and skilled approach, which, though digital, speaks to long histories of collage, montage and superimposition in photography.
Please note: Edition 1 of 3 is sold and in the permanent collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.
About Liliana Farber
Liliana Farber is a Uruguayan-born, New York-based, visual artist. Through research-based processes and using digital strategies, Farber creates still and moving images, installations, and web-based works. These investigate notions of land imaginaries, unmappable spaces, utopias, and techno-colonialism. She uses timestamps, geolocation points, satellite imagery, antique maps, and literature as raw materials for minimal pieces that reflect on the human experience of living within global scale infrastructures and colossal amounts of data.
Farber’s work has been exhibited at The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; The National Museum of Contemporary Art, Lisbon; The Center for Books Art, New York; Ars Electronica Festival, Linz; Arebyte Gallery, London; Panke Gallery, Berlin; Chile’s National Museum of Fine Arts, Santiago; Uruguay’s National Museum of Visual Arts, Montevideo; and WRO Media Art Biennale, Wrocland, among others venues.
Farber is a recipient of the Lumen Prize for Art and Technology, UK. She has been an artist-in-residence at Wassaic Projects, NY, Nars Foundation, NYC, Arebyte Gallery, London (online), and Off Site Projects, London (online). Her work is part of the permanent collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and numerous private collections around the world. She has been featured in On Curating, Switzerland; and MIT’s Leonardo Journal, USA. Farber received her MFA from Parsons School of Design, New York, and her BA from ORT University, Uruguay.