WORKS BY HAND AWARD

WINNER • Elizabeth Z. Pineda - Maíz
SELECTION COMMITTEE • Review Santa Fe 2023 Portfolio Reviewers

  • Hoja de maíz, hoja, hoja de papel

    What does someone’s culture, heritage, and identity say about a person?

    This work began after a recent experience when my personal documents were deemed invalid because they held my married name and not my given name when I was first applying for a passport. I would need a picture ID of me as a child to prove my name and my identity. I was deeply hurt, in shock, and angered. It felt like erasure.

    I began thinking about the validity of documents. The weight that piece of paper has, that “papers” have. And of the fact that they are simply paper.

    I use corn husks to re-create my papers on something I valued–corn. At the beginning, I knew I would make cyanotypes of my birth certificate and marriage license on the husks–and give them the validity that was taken away from them. Shortly thereafter I realized that the experience made me question my roots and the idea of home. What home is and who has a right to dictate what home is and who has a right to it. And with that, cultural identity. So, I thought about what being home means to me. Being home is ultimately my mother and her cooking.

    I began making prints of specific, traditional herbs my mother uses in her cooking. To me they are her and her story, her childhood, how she learned and her stories about cooking with them. That is home. It also made me aware that as people, no matter where one is from, no matter where one is, the mere thought of our homeland food–its aroma, its taste, will immediately transport one home. This is the heart and intent of this work. It gave me the validity I’d lost. It gave me the permission to feel whole. It made me work–hard.

    But, I believe, it also gives others a voice. One, through a humble corn husk.

  • It was wonderful to see creativity in the submissions, including poetry as artist statements, non-traditional printing techniques, and expressing relatable questions. Trends that were not as successful were submissions that came with little to no explanation or if the execution of a project was not thought-out or executed poorly. I was very interested in the submissions that explored unique processes and provided context to explain their concepts.

    In the selected project Maíz by Elizabeth Pineda, this photographer exemplifies how to brilliantly execute a very deeply personal project in a unique way. They have engaged in the exploration of unexpected materials (corn husks) and printing process (cyanotypes). They have connected the physical print with their personal heritage. And finally, they speak to the “value” of government documents and connecting that to resources they see as valuable from their culture.

    - Amanda Hajjar • Director of Exhibitions, Fotografiska New York

About the Artist

Hija del Maíz © Elizabeth Pineda

 
 

Originally from Mexico City, Elizabeth Z. Pineda is a photographic emerging artist based in Surprise, Arizona. Her work explores complicated issues regarding immigration, identity, displacement, and migrant deaths that occur in the Arizona desert. Pineda speaks visually of community, touching on language barriers, culture, and society. Her practice is rooted in the craft of hand-made objects as an expression of her deep ties to the subject matter using historic and untraditional photographic, printmaking, papermaking, and book art processes. Elizabeth holds an MFA in Photography from Arizona State University.

elizabethzpineda.com