Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz Archives | University of Central Florida News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Wed, 03 Jul 2019 19:04:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz Archives | University of Central Florida News 32 32 Art in Odd Places to Feature Pop-Up Exhibits on Campus /news/art-odd-places-feature-pop-exhibits-campus/ Tue, 08 Nov 2016 21:45:03 +0000 /news/?p=74773 Keep your eyes and ears open Wednesday and Thursday around UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss main campus 鶹Ʒ S you just may stumble across some pop-up displays that are part of the national Art in Odd Places event.

Mixed-media sculptures, photography, plein air paintings, musical compositions and other interactive works of art will be scattered around campus. (Hint: places such as the Arboretum, John C. Hitt Library, Colbourn Hall, The Burnett Honors College, Counseling and Psychology Services and other central, walkable locations.)

The art is created by students under the guidance of professors across several College of Arts & Humanities disciplines.

鶹Ʒ SIt is fresh, challenging and unexpected. In this experience, art comes to you, 鶹Ʒ S said Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz, assistant professor in studio art in the School of Visual Arts & Design. 鶹Ʒ SIt intercepts your path to Starbucks or the library, inspires you to observe your environment by highlighting areas you may steadily overlook. It is activating the campus itself as part of the art and who we are as we move through the work. 鶹Ʒ S

The do-not-touch-the-artwork mentality is strong in traditional venues, but putting art elsewhere exposes it to broader audiences.

鶹Ʒ SIt frees the public from some of the preconceived assumptions associated with traditional venues, 鶹Ʒ S said assistant professor Matthew Mosher. 鶹Ʒ SThis helps restructure our understanding of what art is in relation to place and its role in our lives. 鶹Ʒ S

Art in Odd Places is an annual art festival started two decades ago by artist Ed Woodham in New York. This will be the first time UCF has participated, and organizers hope it becomes a tradition.

Woodham, who has been active in community art, education and civic interventions for more than 25 years, will be on the UCF campus Wednesday to talk about the national project and his engagement with the urban environment. He will speak at 3 p.m. at the UCF Art Gallery in the Visual Arts Building.

Art in Odd Places also coincides with the annual School of Visual Arts & Design faculty exhibition, which will open at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

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UCF Professor Creates Latina Personality to Explain Art World /news/ucf-professor-creates-latina-personality-explain-art-world/ /news/ucf-professor-creates-latina-personality-explain-art-world/#comments Mon, 19 Sep 2016 11:00:51 +0000 /news/?p=74057 During Hispanic Heritage Month, UCF Today will share some of our students 鶹Ʒ S and faculty members 鶹Ʒ S stories and how being Latino has shaped their lives.

Before she became a professor, Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz had her work exhibited in galleries around the world.

Now, this assistant professor in UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss School of Visual Arts & Design serves as a self-styled ambassador for first-generation college students and any others who are intimidated by the culture of academia.

They need allies 鶹Ʒ S this [UCF] is probably the only place they 鶹Ʒ Sll be able to find allegiances. 鶹Ʒ S

Her latest project, a tribute to the Pulse nightclub tragedy, will be at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago as part of its 30th annual Día de los Muertos exhibition . Día de los Muertos, the Mexican Day of the Dead, is an annual holiday held in remembrance of dead family and friends. Raimundi-Ortiz has been collecting items of significance from people affected by the Pulse tragedy to craft a three-tiered altar that will debut at the event.

鶹Ʒ SI wanted to make sure that the feeling was authentic, that there 鶹Ʒ Ss a conversation occurring about healing and transcendence, and maybe a bit educational, to acknowledge the Latino presence, because it was a Latino tragedy, 鶹Ʒ S she said.

Raimundi-Ortiz 鶹Ʒ Ss art 鶹Ʒ S her paintings, drawings, photographs and performance-art pieces 鶹Ʒ S are largely based upon self-examination. Her YouTube character Chuleta, for example, a tough-talking Latina personality who deconstructs the oftentimes abstruse elements of the art world, is based on her experience of disconnection between the art world and the communities with which it 鶹Ʒ Ss involved.

鶹Ʒ SThe bulk of my research is about otherness, 鶹Ʒ S she said. 鶹Ʒ SThe work that I make is all about me morphing and becoming different variations of myself 鶹Ʒ SThe creation of Chuleta teaching these crazy art lessons was because I personally got tired of feeling like art institutions pander to the community but don 鶹Ʒ St talk to the community; they talk at the community. 鶹Ʒ S

Raimundi-Ortiz 鶹Ʒ Ss journey began in the Bronx borough of New York City, where she lived with her parents, immigrants from Puerto Rico. They gave their daughter two choices after she graduated high school: get a job or go to school.

In 1995, she enrolled in the Fashion Institute of Technology, the State University of New York 鶹Ʒ Ss college of art, business, design, mass communication and technology connected to the fashion industry, where she earned her associate degree in illustration. In 2002, she took a residency in the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture in Maine, which exposed her to the wider world of art.

Her work has been featured in exhibitions around the world, such as American Chambers, Hush #3 in Korea, Manifesta 8 in Spain, and Ni de Aqui, Ni de Alla: transcultura in El Salvador.

Despite her success as an artist, she never imagined that she would find her calling as a teacher.

鶹Ʒ SAcademia was never even part of my thought process. working-class city chick. The last thing I was thinking about was going to grad school and upper academia, 鶹Ʒ S she said. 鶹Ʒ SI was just trying to tuck my head, make my art. I never thought I would be showing internationally. I never thought I would be lauded enough to sit at this desk and teach other people. 鶹Ʒ S

It wasn 鶹Ʒ St until she crossed paths with African-American postmodernist artist Emma Amos around 2005 that Raimundi-Ortiz gave academia serious consideration.

鶹Ʒ SI think she understood the value of a woman of color getting her education because she also understood all the doors that would never, ever open to me without a master 鶹Ʒ Ss degree, especially as a visual artist, 鶹Ʒ S she said.

At Amos 鶹Ʒ S insistence, Raimundi-Ortiz applied to Rutgers University, where she graduated with a master 鶹Ʒ Ss degree in fine art in 2008. Two years later, she took a job at UCF, where she has taught ever since.

鶹Ʒ SI still think like that inner-city urban chick, 鶹Ʒ S she said. 鶹Ʒ SI haven 鶹Ʒ St forgotten where I 鶹Ʒ Sve come from at all, but 鶹Ʒ S it [graduate school] forever changed the course of my life. 鶹Ʒ S

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