Food For Thought, installation view, 2011  
  
Artists   Raul Ortega Ayala   
 
Raul Ortega Ayala's art focuses on varied habitual themes which he explores through a detailed and absorptive process. Once this process of direct exploration is over, he uses the materials and experiences that he encounters to produce a group of works which the artist calls souvenirs.

The artist's methodology mirrors to a large extent, the work of an ethnographer and the participant observation model of enquiry that is the fundamental research method of social and cultural anthropology. Ethnography as a method seeks to answer central anthropological questions concerning the ways of life of living human beings, the links between society, culture and behavior and how these processes develop over time.

Much like an ethnographer Ortega Ayala produced and assembled large amounts of material including field notes, photographs and artifacts. Spending time reflecting upon and interpreting the material the artist ultimately produced what he calls a reaction to this world. Much like an ethnographer he deals with the issue of the fair representation of his subjects. Similarly he contextualizes the world he examines by stressing what matters to ordinary people in the everyday and the mundane over the extraordinary and the fabulous.

In relation to the difference between the two disciplines of art and anthropology, Susan Hiller has written: By definition art is an anthropological practice and anthropology is by definition an art and the role of the artist is to unveil codes not yet articulated within a culture to manifest a collective belief not yet revealed to look for new forms known but not yet understood (1996: 214). Indeed the work of Ortega Ayala can be read within the context of the so‐called ethnographic turn in contemporary art. The boundaries between art and anthropology have always been blurred; artists, like anthropologists have throughout arts history been interested with cultural representation of otherness. However, these associations have become stronger in recent years since a number of contemporary artists have adopted an anthropological gaze, and sometimes methodologies, such as fieldwork methods in their appropriation of other cultures.

While many artists have experimented with anthropological notions and methodologies, the work of Ortega Ayala strikes one as being unique in its commitment to rigorous and lengthy fieldwork. Within his practice he celebrates representing the other in a strict anthropological sense: being part of a particular world and living that particular life, with the ability to detach and interpret its complexity.
His contribution to anthropology is the ability to transmit a certain kind of knowledge that can only be perceived by visual means. Throughout his practice he establishes a visual and physical link between the concepts raised and the audience thereby achieving a result that would not be possible using written language.

Adapted from a text by Valentina Buonumori: Department of Visual Anthropology, Goldsmithís College, University of London, UK, 2009
 
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Education:
MA, Fine Arts, Glasgow School of Art combined with Hunter College, New York
Visual Arts, E.N.P.E.G. (National School of Painting, Sculpture and Print)
Philosophy, National Autonomous University of Mexico
Cultural Sciences, University of the Cloister of Sor Juana
Painting, E.N.P.E.G. (National School of Painting, Sculpture and Print)

Solo Exhibitions:
Stroom den Haag, The Hague, The Netherlands
The Kowalsky Gallery, DACS, London, curated by Gilane Tawadros
An Ethnography on Gardening, Rokeby Gallery, London
An Ethnography on Gardening, Museo Experimental El Eco, Mexico City
Raul Ortega Ayala, The Economist Plaza, Contemporary Art Society Commission
Bureaucratic Sonata, Rokeby Gallery, London
3 site specific works from the Bureacratic Sonata Series, Arts Depot, London
Risk, Do not disturb, a project in combination with Jemima Burrill, Hiscox Art Projects, London

Group Exhibitions:
Foodprint, Stroom Den Haag, The Hague
At Your Service, curated by Cylena Simmonds, David Roberts Foundation, London
It is not a question of knowing.., The Frye Museum, Seattle
Contemporary Video, PUNCH Gallery, Seattle
Orange, A festival of Art and Food in Montreal
The acceptance world, Laura Barttlet Gallery, London
Mexico 70, Casa del Lago, Mexico City
Bloc, County Hall, London
Pilot:1 (International Art Forum), Limehouse Town Hall, London
MEDIUM:FILM, Mariakappel, Hoorn, Holland
inbox : glasgow, Central Gallery, National Centre for the Arts, Mexico
EV+ A, Limerick, Ireland
Rock Candy, Mariakappel, Hoorn, Holland
60 years of art, Central Gallery, National Arts Center, Mexico
Scottish Drawing, Xiían and Beijing, China
Inport: International VideoóPerformance Art, Estonia
Catch me if you can, National Gallery in Tirana, Albania
New Contemporaries, Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool & Barbican, London
Night of 1,000 Drawings, Artists Space, New York
 
 
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  Raul Ortega Ayala
Bureaucratic Sonata

Published by Monosabios on the occasion of the exhibition at Rokeby.
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