N�stor Arenas (b. Holgu�n, Cuba, 1964). He graduated from the Higher Institute of Art (Havana, 1990). Arenas have widely exhibited his work at solo exhibitions and group shows throughout the U.S., Cuba, Spain and China. Recent exhibitions include, 12th Havana Biennial (2015), "Legopaintings" (Lyle O'Reitzel Gallery, Miami, 2010), Arteam�ricas Art Fair (Miami, 2009 and 2010), Shanghai Art Fair (China, 2010). His work is part of several private and corporate collections such as, Forrest Capital (Miami), The Mosquera ...
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N�stor Arenas (b. Holgu�n, Cuba, 1964). He graduated from the Higher Institute of Art (Havana, 1990). Arenas have widely exhibited his work at solo exhibitions and group shows throughout the U.S., Cuba, Spain and China. Recent exhibitions include, 12th Havana Biennial (2015), "Legopaintings" (Lyle O'Reitzel Gallery, Miami, 2010), Arteam�ricas Art Fair (Miami, 2009 and 2010), Shanghai Art Fair (China, 2010). His work is part of several private and corporate collections such as, Forrest Capital (Miami), The Mosquera Collection (Miami), Jorge Reynardus Collection (New York and Sarasota), Leigh University (Pennsylvania), Universidad de Valencia (Spain), among others.The work of N�stor Arenas immerses us in an imaginary where memory, impulses and desires merge. What we have won and, also, everything we have lost. Losses and profits that return with the appearances of things and affections that are close and, at the same time, spooky. Images that are close, but already diffuse, distant landscapes and, at the same time, domestic that tremble, say Walter Benjamin as "constellations between alienated things and exhaustive meanings."When the work of Arenas is seen in perspective, a warning must be made on the pronounced iconographic trajectory. An iconography deeply tangled with the history he personally lived in Cuba, as much as the one he had to live through outside of. His landscapes, neofigurative and abstract at the same time, project visions where the historical and the personal biography cohabitate. The same way in which he presents the capitalist world. "As I mentioned previously the work of Arenas submerges us in an imagination where memories are smelted, our drives and our desires. That which we have obtained, also, everything that we have lost. Losses and gains that return to us with the appearance of things and personal belongings and at the same time phantasmagorical.Dennys Matos.
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