Age, Biography and Wiki
Felipe Dulzaides was born on 19 February, 0065 in Havana. Discover Felipe Dulzaides's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 58 years old?
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Age |
58 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aquarius |
Born |
19 February, 1965 |
Birthday |
19 February |
Birthplace |
Havana, Cuba |
Nationality |
United States |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 19 February.
He is a member of famous with the age 58 years old group.
Felipe Dulzaides Height, Weight & Measurements
At 58 years old, Felipe Dulzaides height not available right now. We will update Felipe Dulzaides's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Felipe Dulzaides Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Felipe Dulzaides worth at the age of 58 years old? Felipe Dulzaides’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United States. We have estimated
Felipe Dulzaides's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
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Not Available |
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Felipe Dulzaides Social Network
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Timeline
A matter of perspective (2019), sited on Havana's Malecón consisted of an installation of panels that fragmented the perception of the ocean and the city view. These panels, (usually used on construction sites) reference and question the recent spread of hotel construction in Havana's skyline.
The project Felipe Dulzaides plays Felipe Dulzaides (2009-2017) looks into the life and work of his father from an inner perspective. His father was a musician and a mentor that played a key role developing jazz during the early years of the Cuban revolution. In that period the cultural authorities misjudged jazz. His latest project Centro Bahia (2014- on going) is at his studio, a restored space located in Regla, an area located across the bay from Havana. At his studio he is developing a flexible program that can accommodate residencies, exhibitions, lectures and events. Centro Bahia is a hub for developing experimental crossovers between art, ecological, urban, and community issues. Besides serving as his studio, it is a space dedicated to stimulate creative thinking.
Havana is a city rich with a wide range of urban conditions. Dulzaides uses these as settings for a series of performed actions and straightforward documentation pieces based in observations. Eighteen reasons to cease making art (2007-2011) is a photo series that documents a variety of incidents in urban space that reference contemporary sculpture and installation art.
Dulzaides, has exhibited and developed many projects in Cuba. Flag my height (2007) is a neon piece featuring a Cuban flag measuring his tallness. Dulzaides believes that part of the role of an artist is also to articulate a critical perspective. His pieces reflect a balancing and bridging view. A billboard piece titled: All that we have been missing (2008) located in the highway Interstate 40 of Indiana, a state without a warm ocean and tropical beaches, featured two photographs back to back. One side showed the trace of a path in a blue sky. The second image featured a beautiful and warm sandy beach. The two snapshots were taken at a Varadero beach resort, where he spent the first ten years of his childhood. Works like this reinforce recent political ideas about dialogue and negotiation as a solution to the US-Cuba political conflict.
Dulzaides’ interest in tackling the city and public spaces compelled him to orchestrate several interventions and public art projects in different contexts. Double take (2004-2005) consisted of a series of eight site-specific billboards featuring a recognizable detail of the site. Each unannounced billboard appeared in the San Francisco downtown area. The essential is invisible (2005) consisted in the fabrication of an inflatable organ referencing the heart measuring 25 ft. long by 15 wide by 11 ft. high. Viewers can enter the piece through the aorta. Inside they encounter a translucent red space which jumps and move through the organ's chambers. When viewers are inside, the piece moves, the organism is alive. Viewers exit through another artery. Its title references the well-known phrase from the book The Little Prince. It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”
Other process-oriented projects are account-based; a research method based on filtering the explored contents. In 2004 Dulzaides became engaged with modernist architecture for the trilogy of mixed media installations: Utopia posible (1999-on going). This body of work explores and exposes different aspects of the architecture of the unfinished National Art Schools of Cuba. The entire project departs from the very first installation, a simple gesture of cleaning a water channel so that the Next time it rains the water will run. As Utopia posible developed, so did meaningful friendships with the architects that designed these emblematic and controversial buildings: Roberto Gottardi, Vittorio Garatti, and Ricardo Porro. The gesture of cleaning grew into a research based mixed media document that captures and reflects philosophies of its authors as well as their struggle to conclude and defend their work. Recently Dulzaides has joined forces with a team of professionals in building conservation to find ways to conclude and preserve these architectural masterpieces.
On the ball (2000), is one of the most exhibited videos. It explores a psychological state caused by cultural displacement. Video and media curator Rudolf Frieling stated: “Unedited and staged without digital processing, On the Ball presents the visibility of the face as a function of breathing. At the same time, breathing heavily on the camera’s lens plays on the function of the videotape, its reference to time. In this instance, allowing something to become visible also proves itself to be a dialectic process of obscuring and making clear”
In Following an orange (1999), the video that marks the beginning of his oeuvre, Dulzaides sets an orange in motion rolling down the street. At the end of the one-minute orange's arduous ride, it manages to safely cross a busy avenue through the passing cars.
Dulzaides’ work also explores the correlation between an individual and its context: the city. In San Francisco he used as his first studio a rooftop with an extraordinary view in the North Beach neighborhood. He titled it: “a studio without walls.” The two-channel video installation Dialogue with a Foghorn 1999-2002 presents on one channel, Dulzaides moving in circles riding a bicycle at dusk on a roof (a space without exit), while a separate video channel features him responding to a foghorn. Every time he responds to the foghorn with a whistle, he also illuminates his face with a flashlight thus establishing a visual contact with the viewer.
The circle is a recurrent theme in his art due to his autobiographical experience of reentering meaningful scenarios throughout his life. A class trip to Havana in 1999 as a student of the San Francisco Art Institute and an artist's exchange program set him on that direction. For Dulzaides, the nature of the relationship an artist has with context shapes the tone of his work. That is why after completing the project Full Circle (2010–11) at the American Academy in Rome, he decided to base his studio in Havana. Full Circle, is a body of work developed which traces his experience of twenty years earlier in Italy when he abandoned the theater and decided to not return to Havana.
After spending months in Italy and Spain, he moved to Miami. In 1993 he enrolled in documentary photography classes at Miami Dade Community College. In 1998 Dulzaides moved to California to work on his MFA at the San Francisco Art Institute. In San Francisco his work shifted from documentary street photography to conceptual photography, and he became interested in exploring how art relates to life. Bay Area conceptualists: Paul Kos, Tony Labat, and David Ireland particularly inspired him. From 2005 to 2009 he taught installation, conceptual photography, and video courses at the New Genres Department of the San Francisco Art Institute.
In the mid 1980s Dulzaides attended the dramatic arts program of the Instituto Superior de Arte (ISA). As a student he became interested in the concepts of Jerzy Grotowski expressed on his book Towards a Poor Theater. Furthermore, he focused his studies in experimental theater, questioning issues of stereotype in theater representation. After completing his studies, he joined the group Buendia directed by Flora Lawten. While touring in Italy he quit dramatic arts and decided to not return to Havana.
Felipe Dulzaides (born in Cuba, February 23, 1965) is a Cuban-born American contemporary artist. His practice includes installation, photography, video, drawing, sculpture and performance. Two important cities of reference of his works are San Francisco, California and Havana, Cuba.