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Inverted Cave, The New York Times (Accession No.1974.264, from the collection of the Center for the Study of the Study of the Tasaday), 2022


About the artist

Syjuco works in photography, sculpture, and installation, moving from handmade and craft-inspired mediums to digital editing and archive excavations. Using critical wit and collaborative co-creation, her projects leverage open-source systems, shareware logic, and flows of capital, in order to investigate issues of economies and empire. Recently, she has focused on how photography and image-based processes are implicated in the construction of racialized, exclusionary narratives of history and citizenship. For 2019/2020 she is a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow at the National Museum of American History in Washington DC. She is featured in Season 9 of the acclaimed PBS documentary series Art21: Art in the Twenty-First Century. Recent exhibitions include Being: New Photography at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Public Knowledge at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis; and Disrupting Craft: the 2018 Renwick Invitational at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Born in the Philippines in 1974, Syjuco earned her MFA from Stanford University and BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. She is the recipient of a 2020 Tiffany Foundation Award, a 2014 Guggenheim Fellowship Award, and a 2009 Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors Award. Her work has been exhibited widely, including at MoMA/P.S.1, the Whitney Museum of American Art, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, ZKM Center for Art and Technology, the California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, The 12th Havana Bienal, and The 2015 Asian Art Biennial (Taiwan), among others. A long-time educator, she is an associate professor in sculpture at the University of California, Berkeley. She lives in Oakland, California.

Hand-rubbed photocopy transfer on white Hannemuhle Copperplate paper

45 3/4 x 61 1/2 inches

Edition of 4

Master Printer Tom Reed

Methods Hand-rubbed photocopy transfer


Other works by Stephanie Syjuco