Age, Biography and Wiki

Michelle Lopez was born on 1970 in Philippines, is an A 20th-century american women sculptor. Discover Michelle Lopez's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 54 years old?

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Age 54 years old
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Born 1970
Birthday
Birthplace Philippines
Nationality Philippines

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Michelle Lopez Height, Weight & Measurements

At 54 years old, Michelle Lopez height not available right now. We will update Michelle Lopez's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

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Michelle Lopez Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Michelle Lopez worth at the age of 54 years old? Michelle Lopez’s income source is mostly from being a successful sculptor. She is from Philippines. We have estimated Michelle Lopez's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
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Cars Not Available
Source of Income sculptor

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Timeline

1970

Michelle Lopez (born in 1970 of Filipino descent) is an American sculptor and installation artist, whose work incorporates divergent industrial materials to critique present day cultural phenomena.

She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

1992

Michelle Lopez received her B.A. in literature and art history in 1992 at Barnard College, and received her M.F.A in 1994 at The School of Visual Arts.

2000

Lopez first gained critical attention with her sculpture Boy; a leather covered Honda that made its debut in 2000 as part of P.S.1 / MoMA’s Greater New York exhibition.

Her work examines cultural phenomena related to fanaticism, violence, and questions of identity.

Lopez' artistic process looks at post 9/11 experience and its abject residue on the sculptural object.

Such forlorn themes can be found in "Blue Angels", "The Year We Made Contact", "Strange Fruit", "Banner Year".

In her Smoke Clouds work, Lopez explores themes of disappearance through the shifting image within the material of silver nitrate (mirroring solution) poured onto large-scale architectural glass.

Lopez' mirrored smoke clouds reflect the room and the viewer through the original photographic process of silver tinning.

The cloud image appears and disappears as a "puff of smoke" depending on the environment and the viewers position in the room.

Lopez questions the status of the object and the artistic desire to make iconography, while also questioning the viewer's desire to claim it.

Her sound and kinetic installation, Halyard, is a further iteration of examining invisible structures of power.

House of Cards, an installation of an abject collapsing scaffolding system, employs steel rope and street rubble to lift spare minimal lines, as if forms of resistance could actually overcome the well-grooved forms of oppression.

Reflecting the current social and political climate, her most recent work, Ballast & Barricades, suspends a thousand-pound building fragment by using remnants of cultural signifiers such as scaffolding for falling and climbing ladders as counter weight, creating a state on the verge of collapse.

Formerly a faculty member at Yale School of Art in the Department of Sculpture,

Lopez is now faculty in the Fine Arts Program at The School of Design, University of Pennsylvania and leads the Sculpture Division.

2007

In 2007, Lopez participated in a curatorial project with Grimm/Rosenfeld and wrote an essay on sculpture titled

Exit Music (for a Film).

2009

She was awarded the NYFA Fiscal Sponsorship Grant in 2009 and was a recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts Sculpture Fellowship in 2010.

2011

paper- like surfaces of gift wrap, a hint of celebration and renewal.... [T]here is a hint of nose-thumbing at the consistent anality of the Guys, but Lopez's remake is more understated, more extensive, more radical-and a lot more appealing-than that might imply." (Artforum, November 2011)

2013

Public Sculptures include projects with the Public Art Fund and Miami Basel Art Public (Bass Museum, Miami, 2013).

2014

She has had solo exhibitions at Feature Inc., Deitch Projects, ICA Philadelphia, Simon Preston Gallery, Fondazione Trussardi, LA >< Art, and the Aldrich Contemporary Museum of Art (2014).

She has been in group exhibitions at the Brooklyn Museum, PS 1/MOMA, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and Artist Space.

2017

Other recent group exhibitions include ‘You Just Fit, You and I,’ Harvard Carpenter Center for the Arts (2017); ‘Re-Enactments,’ Museum of Contemporary Art & Design (MCAD), Manila, Philippines (2017).

2019

In 2019, she earned a Guggenheim fellowship in the category of Fine Arts.

In a Frieze review, Morgan Falconer describes Lopez's sculpture as "marvelously poised between being one strange thing and something stranger still."

Michael Wilson of Artforum reviewed Blue Angels when the series appeared at Simon Preston Gallery in New York: “Turning Minimalist form against itself is hardly a new idea-one might even consider, it a genre unto itself- but it still offers room for maneuver.

In Vertical Neck, her second solo exhibition at Simon Preston, Brooklyn-based artist Michelle Lopez presented a strong, clean suite of five new sculptures that capitalize on the movement’s enduring legacy but sidestep parody and polemic to arrive at a more subtly allusive language.... Three roughly folded and heavily crumpled sheets of aluminum lean against the wall and tower above head height, their interiors painted blue or black, their exteriors white or colorlessly reflective.

The suggestion that attempts at formal perfection are necessarily doomed to failure is clear, but in their fun-house-mirror distortions, these works direct that argument at not only artistic folly but also the viewer’s own vanities and imperfections.

Still, the news isn’t all bad; there’s an insinuation in the aluminum’s shiny.