Paint the world: Maldonado’s art has graced walls, swimming pools, even broken skateboards.
Puerto Rico. “Our generation was
part of a boom of graffiti artists in
San Juan,” she says, adding that she
and her friends took advantage of di-
lapidated buildings and unused pub-
lic space in the city. But unlike her
peers she used brushes and acrylic
paint instead of spray cans. “It was
cheaper,” she explains.
For Sofia Maldonado, the world is a canvas. Liter- ally. Her colorful designs embellish building fa- cades, highways and even s wimming pool floors. Her work has been showcased at New York’s PIN TA art fair and
the Havana Biennial, but her favorite
pieces are some of her now-scuffed-up murals, skateboards and rinks in
Cuba and in her native Puerto Rico.
REAL ART WAYS/STEVE LASCHEVER
The Brooklyn-based muralist, 25,
has made a career of bringing art to
skate parks and skate culture. While
her art also includes more gallery-friendly media, like paint on canvas,
she prefers large outdoor spaces. “I
don’t limit my work to museums and
galleries,” she says. “I like to put my
artwork in the eyes of people who
don’t often go to art shows.”
In 2006 she began studying art at
the prestigious Pratt Institute in New
York. A year later, she had her first
solo show, Tropic Storm, at Magnan
Galleries. The three-part exhibition
featured skate bags (which she designed), paintings on broken skateboards and a video that documents
Maldonado creating a skate bowl
from an abandoned pool. In keeping
with her ethos that art should be interactive, she painted and installed
a small ramp in the gallery that was
open for public use.
Maldonado began painting as
a high school student in San Juan,
Maldonado, who describes herself
as an amateur skater, traces her fascination with skate culture to her desire to create interactive, democratic
art. She takes cues from skaters who
are constantly spotting freestyle skating spots in the urban setting. Where
they see a good place to skate, she
sees a good place to paint.
ARTS INNOVATOR
Sofia Maldonado
Puerto Rico
Her skate-themed art eventually
brought Maldonado’s focus to Cuba—
her mother’s birthplace—and made
her an unlikely diplomat. Last April,
she participated in the Havana Biennial, where she launched
SkateMyPa-tria, an effort to connect the island’s
isolated skate community with the
rest of the world.
In addition to delivering 40 hand-painted skateboards and other equipment from the U.S. skaters to their
counterparts, Maldonado and her cohorts painted a skate park, exchanged
skate lessons with locals, and filmed
a short documentary about the experience. Maldonado is presenting
the documentary and other artifacts
from Havana’s skate community at
the Taller Puertoriqueño in Philadelphia this fall.
Outside of the skate bowl, Maldonado’s career is picking up. Last
spring, she was commissioned to
paint a three-story-high mural in
Hartford, Connecticut. Maldonado
is designing for Etnies shoes this
fall, and in the winter, will enter the
world of high fashion. She’s working
on a clothing line that will hit the
runway in February.
AMERICASQUARTERLY.ORG
FALL 2009 Americas Quarterly 27