Martha Atienza
Bio
Martha Atienza (b. 1981, Manila, Philippines; lives and works in Bantayan Island Philippines) is a Dutch-Filipino video artist exploring the format’s ability to document and question issues related to the environment, community, and development. Born to a Dutch mother and Filipino father, Atienza has navigated between these cultures throughout her life, and the oscillation between the two significantly influence her approach to observation, documentation, and the concept of the gaze. Her video is rooted in both ecological and sociological concerns as she studies the intricate interplay between local traditions, human subjectivity, and the natural world. Frequently examining her immediate surroundings, she excels in exploring the potential of art as a catalyst for societal transformation.
She won the Baloise Art Prize in Art Basel for her seminal work Our Islands in 2017. Prior to this, she was twice awarded the Ateneo Art Awards in Manila (2012/2016) and the Cultural Center of the Philippines Thirteen Artist Award (2015). Recent biennales and triennials include the 17th Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul (2022), Bangkok Art Biennale: Escape Routes, BACC, Bangkok (2020), Honolulu Biennial: To Make Wrong / Right / Now, Oahu, Hawaii (2019); and the 9th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, QAGOMA, Brisbane (2018). Recent group exhibitions include An Ocean in Every Drop at the Jameel Arts Center, Dubai (2022), Breaking Water at Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati (2022), and Animal Kingdom at Âme Nue Artspace, Hamburg (2021). Her solo exhibition The Protectors inaugurated Silverlens New York in 2022.
Selected Works
Selected Works
From the 2016 Singapore Biennale: An Atlas of Mirrors
Selected Exhibitions
15 June - 18 June 2017
Public Art
Selected Videos
Selected Press
- Martha Atienza’s ‘Our Islands’ Brings the Seas of Philippines to Times Square
- Dutch-Filipino artist's work featured in New York Times Square Arts Midnight Moment
- Martha Atienza takes over Times Square
- Filipina artist’s work lights up New York’s Times Square
- Times Square Arts' Midnight Moment: Martha Atienza's ‘Our Islands'
- Martha Atienza and Catherine Dong at Times Square
- George Soros’ Open Society Foundations Announced Its 2023 Soros Art Fellows
- Open Society Foundations Announce 2023 Soros Arts Fellows
- Homo Sacer: Life Unlawed
- What Are We All Without Water?
- Martha Atienza’s and Yee I-Lann’s Decolonizing Projects
- At Frieze London, a Web of Art Circling the World
- Frieze London 2022: 7 Directors Introduce Their Booths
- The Natural World at Frieze London 2022
- Frieze London: Martha Atienza (Silverlens, Stand IN8)
- New York Exhibitions to See: Fall 2022
- Indra's Net Curated by Sandhini Poddar
- Silverlens Gallery, a Heavyweight in the Southeast Asian Art Scene, Is Flipping the Script by Expanding Westward With a New York Outpost
- Artist Martha Atienza and the Fight for Environmental Justice in the Philippines
- Equation of State, Martha Atienza
- Art: Martha Atienza’s Equation of State — Using Island Technology and Video to Illuminate the Effects of Climate Change in Bantayan’s Communities
- Martha Atienza protects Filipino shores with robotic mangroves
- Environmental issues grow on the Taipei Biennial
- Rising Tides: The islands of Martha Atienza
- The 9th Asia Pacific Triennial Keeps Up With The Zeitgeist
- Filipino political figures submerged in underwater parade
- Art Basel’s Baloise Art Prize Awarded to Martha Atienza and Sam Pulitzer
- Sam Pulitzer, Martha Atienza Win Baloise Art Prize at Art Basel
- Art Basel saw the annual Baloise Art Prize go to two artists earlier this week
- Martha Atienza and Sam Pulitzer Named Winners of Baloise Art Prize 2017
- Martha Atienza’s Sub-aquatic Procession Wins in Art Basel
- Why the international art world is paying attention to Martha Atienza’s video art
- Filipino artists triumph at the Singapore Biennale
- A new breed: The 5 winners of the 2016 Ateneo Art Awards
- CCP announces the 13 Artists for 2015
- Art and Science: Finding sense and beauty in a world of chaos
- Martha Atienza's three-screen story of the sea