BIO

Born in Ragusa, she lives and works between Vittoria (RG) and Staten-Island (NY). After graduating as Master of Art and Applied Arts in Ceramics, she obtained an Academic Diploma in Sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts of Catania in 2008, followed by Martina Corgnati. In 2013 she finished the Specialization Course in Sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Carrara in the class of Sculpture with Aron Demetz, and Painting with Gianni Dessì; she was selected at the Royal Academy of Art, in the course of "Art and Science", The Hague | KABK; she completed her artistic training, on the pedagogical level, at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence. In 2016 she collaborated with Cartier as a stage sculptor. In 2019 she was invited to China for a collaboration with the University of Suzhou Art & Design Technology Institute. In 2020 she collaborated with the Fiumara d'Arte Foundation, directed by Antonio Presti, to create a monumental work for the City of Catania. In 2021, she co-founded the OMAR project.

 

Tamara Marino is a multifaceted artist, using a variety of techniques and materials for the realization of her works, which mainly consist of site-specific installations, sculptures, paintings, performances / happenings, photographic and video documentations. Her current research is developed through two types of investigation: 1) the anthropological analysis of new feminisms, trying, through various types of approaches, to propose new questions; 2) the study and observation of place, culture and people in relation to her cultural context of origin. The accumulation and rhythmic repetition of the object, as well as of the obsessive gesture during the creative act, represent a constant, an open gateway to the scenario of obsessions that belong to its processual sphere. Action is the most important reference: it is what makes his work performative, ranging from produced objects to photographic shots, from video to happenings. Her work develops at the end of a process of theoretical and analytical study and then reveals itself through the medium most suitable for artistic restitution.