Circunloquio , 2012
80 x 8 x 0.5 in (h x w x d)
mixed media Courtesy of the artist
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Carlos Estévez (Havana, Cuba, 1969) uses marionettes, whose bodies are created out of the forms of musical instruments, to create art that has both a whimsical delight and a silent poignancy. His bodies are not animated with life, but hanging limp on their strings. His figures seem sadly uninspired by the music that their bodies have the potential to make. In this way, Estevez’s work walks a line between suggesting his character’s unrealized potential, balanced with the possibility that at any moment they might begin to play the music within themselves. Estevez underscores the relationship between the human body and musical instruments. In Circunloquio (Circumlocution) the artist draws the visual parallel between the s-curves of the violin and the sinuous line of the hips, waist, and breasts of the female body; a visual relationship most famously depicted by Man Ray’s Ingres’ Violin, Ray’s 1924 photograph inspired by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres's La Grande Baigneuse, 1808. Ray transforms the female body into a musical instrument by painting sound-holes on her back, playing with the idea of objectification of the body. But Estevez does not just confine himself to the violin, also employing the clarinet, the harpsicord, and a plethora of other instruments to create an array of different body types an orchestra of humanity.

Other works by Carlos Estevez

Intercambios de Miradas , 2015
60 x 46 in (h x w)
Oil and watercolor paint and pencil on canvas Courtesy of the artist
Lehman College Art Gallery
Soliloquio , 2012
80 x 8 x 0.5 in (h x w x d)
mixed media Courtesy of the artist
Lehman College Art Gallery
Orquesta de cámara celestial (Celestial Chamber Orchestra) , 2015
100 x 66 in (h x w)
Oil and watercolor pencil on linen Courtesy of the artist
Lehman College Art Gallery

More from Lehman College Art Gallery

Piano Chair , 2011
45 x 55 in (h x w)
Digital Animation Courtesy of Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London
Lehman College Art Gallery
A Place for Infinite Tuning II , 2015
49 x 49 in (h x w)
Hand-cut oud and viola, artificial flowers, plywood, mirrored Plexiglas and steel, mirrored Plexiglas, velcro, latex paint Courtesy of the artist and Priska Pasquer Gallery
Lehman College Art Gallery
Song for Sebald , 2017
59.3 x 38.5 in (h x w)
Hand-cut archival inkjet prints, headphones, Plexiglas, MP3 players, plywood and foam Courtesy of the artist and Priska Pasquer Gallery Photograph by Steven Probert
Lehman College Art Gallery
Pencil (Guitar) , 2013
26 x 29.5 in (h x w)
Digital c-print Courtesy of the artist and Priska Pasquer Gallery
Lehman College Art Gallery
My Song to Sing , 2013
84 x 84 in (h x w)
Ink, Acrylic, paper and fabric collage on wood panel Private Collection Photo Credit: Jason Mandella
Lehman College Art Gallery