Maria Gaspar

Maria Gaspar (born 1980) is an American interdisciplinary artist and educator.

Her works have been exhibited at venues including the MoMA PS1 in NYC, Museum of Contemporary Art located in Chicago, Artspace in New Haven, CT, African American Museum, Philadelphia, PA, and many others. Gaspar's work has been written about in the New York Times Magazine, Artforum, The Chicago Tribune, Hyperallergic, and many other publications.

Early life and education
Gaspar was born in the Little Village neighborhood of Chicago in 1980. She is first-generation to parents who migrated from Mexico to Chicago's West Side in the 1960's. Her mother was a teacher and professional clown and later went on to be a community-radio DJ in Little Village at a station called WCYC that was part of the Boys & Girls Club. Gaspar has stated in numerous interviews that her mother's work has deeply influenced her art. She attended Whitney M. Young Magnet High School, which had a strong art department, and started her public art career painting community murals. She received a BFA from Pratt Institute in 2002 and in 2009 she received an MFA from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Career
Gaspar's body of work has received numerous awards including a 2022 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a 2015 Creative Capital Award, and a 2016 Robert Rauschenberg Artist as Activist Fellowship, amongst many others. Gaspar is an Associate Professor of Contemporary Practices at School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Notable works

 * At the Same Time, One and Many (2023)
 * Unblinking Eyes, Awaiting (2023)
 * Clamour (2022)
 * Feedback (2019)
 * Unblinking Eyes, Watching (2019)
 * Brown Brilliance Darkness Matter (2016)
 * Haunting Raises Specters (by A.G.) (2015)
 * City As Site (2010)
 * Radioactive: Stories from Beyond the Wall
 * Sounds for Liberation
 * The 96 Acres Project (2012–2016)
 * On the Border of What is Formless and Monstrous

Awards

 * 2022 Latinx Artist Fellowship
 * 2022 Guggenheim Fellowship
 * 2021 United States Artists Fellowship
 * 2020 Frieze Impact Prize
 * 2020 Art Matters Grant
 * 2018 Imagining Justice Art Grant
 * 2017 Art Matters Grant
 * 2017 Chamberlain Award for Social Practice at the Headlands Center for the Arts
 * 2016 Robert Rauschenberg Artist as Activist Fellowship
 * 2015 Creative Capital Award
 * 2015 Joan Mitchell Emerging Artist Grant
 * Chicagoan of the Year in the Arts in 2014 by art critic and historian, Lori Waxman
 * 2008 Sor Juana Women of Achievement Award in Art and Activism from the National Museum of Mexican Art