Enrique Rottenberg


Enrique Rottenberg is an artist currently working with photography and installations. His artistic career is as plural as his national identity. Born in Argentina in 1948, to Jewish parents of Polish descent, he emigrated alone to Israel at the age of 13.

Biography

After serving in the Israeli army, he developed a successful real estate business, while at the same time, beginning in 1980, he started producing films and studied at the Camera Obscura School in Tel Aviv. Among his best known films are: Nagua, Bar 51, Himo the King of Jerusalem and the film The Elected. He was the director and screenwriter of the film Revenge of Itzik Finkelstein, which won seven awards from the Israeli Film Academy and represented Israel in 1994 at the Oscars.
In 1993, he arrived in Cuba where he currently lives. In Cuba, he built the Miramar Trade Center, a major business complex in the city of Havana, which he still runs to this day. In this center, he has also created a significant Cuban art collection for the country.
He wrote the novel Cejalinda, published under the title: La mujer de su vida, Quarto, Spain, in 2006.
In Cuba, he began his photographic work. In 2010, his first series Sleeping with... was exhibited at the Cuban Photo Library, which is now part of the collection of this institution and of numerous private and institutional collections, along with other works of his. Sleeping with... was selected by Discoveries of PhotoEspaña 2011. Today, his work has wide recognition amongst both the public and critics. He took part in the 2012 Havana Biennial with two of his series, The Family and Self-portraits.
Among the most important series are: Self-portraits, The Family, Forgotten, Cuts as well as large format works such as The Line, Centipede and photo installations: 19 women and one bed and The dance.
He collaborates with the new cultural project “Cuban Art Factory”, promoting the development of contemporary photography and visual arts in Cuba.

Photographic Work

The photographic work of Enrique Rottenberg may be considered controversial, satirical, manic-melancholic, lewd, empathic, alarming...The reasons behind the attraction that it causes, whether it be of allure or tension, laughter or pain, surprise or rejection, beauty and horror, are diverse, but they all seem to be gathered in a certain way under the Schelling's definition of the term: the disturbing oddness or the ominous : " everything that being intended to remain a secret, hidden, has come to light."
But yet, everything that seems obvious and familiar becomes paradoxical and borderline absurd. Perhaps Rottenberg's photography is an unsuspecting heir to his film imagery, and tries to represent timeless and motionless scenes, stunned characters, suspended environments, frozen stories, as if each and every one of them were shocked by suddenly coming to light, while remaining irremediably suspended. But this is the face-surface that is capable of opening towards another movement and another time, unknown, unusual, disjunct: the other scene – the fantasy, and the other scene of reality.
There is a movement that doesn't stop within Rottenberg's work, repeated and distressing, which builds its multiple layers, all the way from the greatly theatrical to the edge of reality, from the shadows of dreams to the brutal light of the vigil, from self-narcissism to mass psychology, to find the way out at any cost, reaching the encounter with what cannot be reconciled. In these provocations there's a struggle, away of resisting. Resisting the orders and those who dictate, but also the dominated and defeated; the gods, the myths, the mimicry and consensus, but to some instance of resisting to destiny itself, to all the established and pre-established destinies, even that off innateness and the indecipherable meaning of life? Rottenberg is a manufacturer of history, because history is the necessity of life, in its differences with death.
He is also a destroyer of illusions. He has the ability to distress the subject, until he reveals some invisible, strange place within himself. The looks in his portraits are incisive, painful, powerful, and at the end of that open crack primary helplessness looms. In his composition she uses eloquent backgrounds, as if what is behind the scene were the undertone of his real meaning.
Rottenberg's language is paradoxical, whence that feeling of surprise and perplexity: on one side he's directly affective unwilling to re-create metaphors; his images are cries, onomatopoeias, moans, silences; on the other hand, he makes poetry, creating metaphors as a side effect, immanent to affectionate, self-produced. Always multiple and open metaphors and symbols, but also downright personal. The disruption of the compositional syntax, the variety of colors found, the exposed textures, the bluntness, are what create a style, and at the limit, an enigma. A wandering language without a country, that of an identity that escapes from the identical, always becoming: becoming-man, becoming-animal, becoming-woman, becoming-mass, becoming-another...

Statements of his series

Solo Exhibitions
Group exhibitions
2018
Dividuos, FotoFAC: Cuban Art Factory, Havana, 2018
2017
Curar la historia: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, 2017
Critical Mass: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, 2017
The Improper: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, Cuba
Critical Mass: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, Cuba
The Double : Artlima, Lima, Peru
Shifting Metaphores: Cuba in changing times: ROSFOTO, San Petersburg, Russia
2016
Subjects and Predicates: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, Cuba
Parallel Worlds: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, Cuba
A hundred years of Cuban Women: National Museum of Photograph, Havana, Cuba
2015
Becoming Animal: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, Cuba
Utopia: FotoFAC, Cuban Art Factory, Havana, Cuba
2014
2013
2012
2011
Publications:
Collections
National Museum of Photograph
Rubin
MOCA
Kunsthalle HGN
21c Museum Hotels, U.S.A.
Madeleine Plonsker, U.S.A.