Jacoub Reyes, "Auto-Retrato (como espíritu de plátano)"

$200.00
NFS

Woodblock print on Mulberry, 8.5x11", 2022.

SHIPPING IS NOT INCLUDED. PLEASE CONTACT INFO@COLLARWORKS.ORG FOR A SHIPPING ESTIMATE.

BIO

Jacoub Reyes hosts workshops, performances, and collaborative projects around the US. He is currently the Artistic Director for the City of Boynton Beach's Quantum Eco-Park and Artist in Residence at American Landmark. Reyes is a recipient of the Broward County Artist Innovation Grant, Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant, 4Culture Grant, The Puffin Foundation, The Pew Collective Grant, Allies in Arts Grant, Artist Relief Grant, Immerse Artist Grant, and the Awesome Grant, among others. His work is held in several public and private collections, including MassArt, Morgan Conservatory, UCF, Frontera Galeria Urbana, The City of Orlando's Public Art Collection, The Miami-Dade Public Library System’s Permanent Art Collection, MDPLS Zine Library, and The Vasari Project. He has exhibited regionally, nationally, and internationally and actively attends residencies worldwide. He holds a BFA in Drawing and Printmaking from UCF.

STATEMENT

Jacoub Reyes is a printmaker and installation artist living in Miami, Florida. Reyes was born into a divided household to a Cuban/Puerto Rican mother and a Pakistani/ Indian father. Throughout his early development, he carried two sets of foundation pillars: two names, two religions, two separate friends, and families. This started his pursuit of investing in community outreach, decolonizing education, and raising awareness of the inequities found in his community, the Caribbean, and the United States. In Reyes' current focus, he identifies native Caribbean flora and fauna in his area and explores their relation to invasive ones. These anthropomorphic figures often embody a complex, torn history, which becomes ingrained in his large wood carvings. These figures mark a quintessential shift in culture, language, and identity reflected in his practice of finding materials, making tools, and printing without a press. With this, he aims to re-contextualize narratives and traditional colonial imagery.

Add To Cart

Woodblock print on Mulberry, 8.5x11", 2022.

SHIPPING IS NOT INCLUDED. PLEASE CONTACT INFO@COLLARWORKS.ORG FOR A SHIPPING ESTIMATE.

BIO

Jacoub Reyes hosts workshops, performances, and collaborative projects around the US. He is currently the Artistic Director for the City of Boynton Beach's Quantum Eco-Park and Artist in Residence at American Landmark. Reyes is a recipient of the Broward County Artist Innovation Grant, Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant, 4Culture Grant, The Puffin Foundation, The Pew Collective Grant, Allies in Arts Grant, Artist Relief Grant, Immerse Artist Grant, and the Awesome Grant, among others. His work is held in several public and private collections, including MassArt, Morgan Conservatory, UCF, Frontera Galeria Urbana, The City of Orlando's Public Art Collection, The Miami-Dade Public Library System’s Permanent Art Collection, MDPLS Zine Library, and The Vasari Project. He has exhibited regionally, nationally, and internationally and actively attends residencies worldwide. He holds a BFA in Drawing and Printmaking from UCF.

STATEMENT

Jacoub Reyes is a printmaker and installation artist living in Miami, Florida. Reyes was born into a divided household to a Cuban/Puerto Rican mother and a Pakistani/ Indian father. Throughout his early development, he carried two sets of foundation pillars: two names, two religions, two separate friends, and families. This started his pursuit of investing in community outreach, decolonizing education, and raising awareness of the inequities found in his community, the Caribbean, and the United States. In Reyes' current focus, he identifies native Caribbean flora and fauna in his area and explores their relation to invasive ones. These anthropomorphic figures often embody a complex, torn history, which becomes ingrained in his large wood carvings. These figures mark a quintessential shift in culture, language, and identity reflected in his practice of finding materials, making tools, and printing without a press. With this, he aims to re-contextualize narratives and traditional colonial imagery.

Woodblock print on Mulberry, 8.5x11", 2022.

SHIPPING IS NOT INCLUDED. PLEASE CONTACT INFO@COLLARWORKS.ORG FOR A SHIPPING ESTIMATE.

BIO

Jacoub Reyes hosts workshops, performances, and collaborative projects around the US. He is currently the Artistic Director for the City of Boynton Beach's Quantum Eco-Park and Artist in Residence at American Landmark. Reyes is a recipient of the Broward County Artist Innovation Grant, Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant, 4Culture Grant, The Puffin Foundation, The Pew Collective Grant, Allies in Arts Grant, Artist Relief Grant, Immerse Artist Grant, and the Awesome Grant, among others. His work is held in several public and private collections, including MassArt, Morgan Conservatory, UCF, Frontera Galeria Urbana, The City of Orlando's Public Art Collection, The Miami-Dade Public Library System’s Permanent Art Collection, MDPLS Zine Library, and The Vasari Project. He has exhibited regionally, nationally, and internationally and actively attends residencies worldwide. He holds a BFA in Drawing and Printmaking from UCF.

STATEMENT

Jacoub Reyes is a printmaker and installation artist living in Miami, Florida. Reyes was born into a divided household to a Cuban/Puerto Rican mother and a Pakistani/ Indian father. Throughout his early development, he carried two sets of foundation pillars: two names, two religions, two separate friends, and families. This started his pursuit of investing in community outreach, decolonizing education, and raising awareness of the inequities found in his community, the Caribbean, and the United States. In Reyes' current focus, he identifies native Caribbean flora and fauna in his area and explores their relation to invasive ones. These anthropomorphic figures often embody a complex, torn history, which becomes ingrained in his large wood carvings. These figures mark a quintessential shift in culture, language, and identity reflected in his practice of finding materials, making tools, and printing without a press. With this, he aims to re-contextualize narratives and traditional colonial imagery.