Antonio Briceño


Antonio Briceño is a professional photographer and has been a passionate activist in environmental issues, as well as in ethnic minorities and human rights. He has a graduate degree in Biology from the Central University of Venezuela and a master's degree in Digital Arts from the Pompeu Fabra University, and he is the co-founder of the prestigious conservationist nongovernmental organization PROVITA.

Biography

Briceño's passion for photography began when he was a teenager and he first exhibited his work in 1987. Between 1996 and 2002, he carried out several solo exhibitions, relating to the following topics: Veils and Turbans ; Passengers ; Devotion ; Guadalupanos ; and The Shamans.
Between 2001 and 2007, he worked on the project entitled Gods of America: Natural Pantheon, in which he used digital photomontage, creating a pantheon of different deities and mythological beings from different indigenous cultures across the American continent. This project covered ten cultures from six different countries: Huichol, Piaroa, Kogui and Wiwa, Wayuu, Kuna, Quero, Kayapó, and Ye'Kuana and Pemón. He received several grants that allowed him to carry out the project, including grants from the Programa de Intercambio de Residencias Artísticas, the Estancia para Creación Artística Grant and the Apoyo an Artistas Grant,.
Gods of America represented Venezuela at the 52nd Venice Biennale and have been exhibited, in either solo or group shows, in Finland, France, Hungary, Sweden, Germany, the United Kingdom, Spain, the United States, Mexico, Colombia, New Zealand and Venezuela. The artist received the Green Leaf Award for Artistic Excellence 2008, awarded by the Natural World Museum and the United Nations Environment Program for this compelling series, in addition to various other prizes and highly commented awards in his home country, Venezuela.
In 2008, Briceño carried out a project entitled The Tree, in which he photographed the New Zealand Maori's worship of forefathers. Afterwards, in 2009, the Colombian Ministry of Culture invited him to create a series about the current situation of indigenous groups in their country, which resulted in the exhibit Look at us. Here we are in Bogotá and other cities around Colombia.
The same year he was invited by the Government of Finland and the Sámi Parliament to carry out the project 520 Reindeer. A homage to Sàmi language, which depicts the richness and importance of the languages of the Sámi, who are the last surviving indigenous people in Western Europe. This series has been exhibited in Venezuela and in Finland, and one of its main pieces was presented at the headquarters of the United Nations in New York during the Indigenous Peoples and Food Sovereignty exhibition. Now, the complete series belongs to the Sámi people SIIDA Museum in Inari, Finland.
In 2010, the institution Art Works for Change and the United Nations Environment Program invited him to carry out an artistic project on biodiversity in Rwanda, which he entitled Millions of pieces. One Puzzle. This series was presented during on the occasion of the World Environment Day celebrations of 2010, and it was exhibited at the Field Museum in Chicago. Two years later, in 2012, the artist presented The weepers. Our last tears, a series consecrated to the repression of emotions, so characteristic of our contemporary culture, produced entirely in Northern Peru. That same year, he received the 2011 International Association of Art Critics Award for his outstanding career and commitment to the expression of a poetics of respect for the planet, its inhabitants and its cultures.
Most recently, in 2014, Briceño presented the series Omertà on oil. The era of silence, a video installation consisting on several video-portraits of victims of torture and other forms of disproportionate use of force by the military and paramilitary groups controlled by the government of Nicolas Maduro, during the civil protest and demonstrations that took place on February and March of that same year. Furthermore, his last series to this day, The skin of Mars, reflects precisely on the violence of war and the scars we bear as species and as individuals through the overlapping of images of planet Mars taken by NASA and pictures of as many sculptures of the homonymous god that rest in the collections of art museums around the world.
Finally, in addition to his personal artistic endeavours, the artist has often collaborated with conservationist organizations: in 2007 he worked for Conservation International documenting the institution's cooperation programs for the Ye'kuana people in Venezuela, and in 2012 he photographed the Pumé and Yopal communities, also in Venezuela, for The Nature Conservancy. Likewise, he has been invited to join the jury of the annual photography contest sponsored by PROVITA and the IUCN.