- Presentation | The Youth of Genius
- The Classical Exhibition | The story of a Hellenic Kingdom
- Interview | To understand the spanish people, one needs to know what bullfighting entails
- The Contemporary Exhibition | Antonio López
- The Work | A young masterpiece of Goya
- Space | Architecture at the limit and on the limit
- Portfolio | Typologies of Perspective
- In the studio | Creative Freedom
- Investigation | Francisco Gutierrez
- The collection of | Instinct of an entrepreneur
- Auctions of Classical and Modern Art
- Written by | José Juan Barba, Mª Pilar Bustinduy, Fernando Castro Flórez, Cristina Giménez, Michael Scott, Fernando Tabar Anitua, Marta Torres, Adrian Tyler, Enrique Valdivieso

Creative Freedom
She has been the first Spaniard to opt for the Turner prize. Her broken canvases and patched works made her one of the finalists of the prestigious prize last year. ARS visits her studio, in the London neighborhood of Portobello, where she prepares works that will be exposed in Melbourne in September. The cerebral palsy that attached her to a wheel chair a few years ago has not stopped her from performing her creative labor. She no longer breaks the canvas racks, she has helpers for that.
By Cristina Giménez
This article is only avalaible in the print edition |
BUY THE MAGAZINE



