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A Muse in View
A Muse in View
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A Che Industry
A Che Industry
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8th Street Music
8th Street Music
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Amaru
Amaru
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Aquarius Propaganda
Aquarius Propaganda
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Figure Study
Figure Study
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Single Parent
Single Parent
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Glad Is
Glad Is
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A Passion
A Passion
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Faced Teeth
Faced Teeth
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The Bonds of Blood
The Bonds of Blood
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Biografía: Kiki Valdes

By: Zachary Martin The first thing you notice about Kiki Valdes is the way he seems to blur at the edges, like a night photograph. Just as quick as he sits down he is up again, pacing, going over to his closet, pulling out a canvas to show you. No sooner has he looked you squarely in the eye and asked where you stand regarding America’s embargo on Cuba, staring you down like a blood-soaked matador, than he is patting you on the shoulder, telling you a joke about the time he and some artist friends went down to an isolated isle off Big Pine Key. Kiki has a big personality – Miami Big – and he moves with all the frenetic energy of the city. He seems to feed off it and, in a way, embody all its contradictions: poorest metropolitan area in the U.S., playground to the rich; South Florida, “North Cuba;” the Everglades, urban sprawl; Cocaine Cowboys, retirees playing shuffleboard. As Hispanics become the largest minority in the country and citizens continue moving south in droves, Miami is becoming the epitome of the new North America. And Kiki is at the center of it all, sketchbook in hand. I first met Kiki when we were both students at the prestigious New World School of the Arts in Miami. I was there because I wanted to be an artist. Or at least I thought I wanted to be an artist, before he and I became friends. Around Kiki, one quickly learns that their conception of “ambition” is rather pale. Kiki ran circles around all of us at New World. While other students were still working on tiny watercolor tablets, Kiki was stitching together pieces of canvas for murals, or nailing together scrap wood he had salvaged from the worksite across from the school, or painting on old lamps, tables, walls, pieces of cardboard. The notion that pages have edges never occurred to Kiki. Neither did the notion of idleness. No sooner had he finished a piece than he was on to another one. Occasionally, he filled an entire wall in the studio with his paintings and moved between them, adding and subtracting, seeing the whole world as one continuous act of artistic expression. In a world of frail artists’ egos, Kiki's self- assuredness was both refreshing and contagious – a class with Kiki was sure to be a lesson in work ethic and the delight of the creative process. During that embryonic period in our artistic development, Kiki had already figured out the painter's primary job -- to work until his fingers bleed. Having been raised on John Constable and realist still-lifes, the first time I saw one of Kiki's paintings, it was easy to dismiss: the paint seemed too thick; the brushstrokes were too broad; the lines looked too bold; the figures weren't representational enough. But once I got to know Kiki and his aesthetic sensibilities, I realized that he was interested in serving a higher God than life-like rendering: Expression. To be as blunt as possible, until I had worked alongside Kiki, listened to his stories, understood the mythologies he was trying to express in his work, drawn from the same models and still-lifes as him, I had not understood art. Hanging next to my canvases, I got the distinct sense that Kiki's work had captured something much more essential to the human condition, something much truer to life. Indeed, Kiki seems to operate at the forefront of many things about life in America today. From independent magazine publishing to multimedia/live art events, Kiki has securely pitched his tent at the sharpest end of the cutting edge. But he doesn't claim that he's found something other artists have overlooked for the last ten centuries. Rather, his work continues to explore universal themes: love, spirituality, heritage, death. In short, the remarkable agony and beauty of being alive. From Michelangelo to Rembrandt, and Hieronymus Bosch to Willem de Kooning, this is what great artists do -- they surprise the viewer with the unique ways they represent age-old truths. When people ask me to talk about Kiki's work, I think back to an art show he and I were involved in, in 2000, and I picture the layout of the gallery. I had submitted two small aquatint etchings and they hung, well out of sight of anyone except the most observant museum patron, on a structural pillar. Kiki's work, on the other hand -- a massive, multi-paneled portrait -- occupied the most prominent spot in the gallery. It wasn't just that Kiki wanted the spot because of his insatiable desire to share his artistic vision, it was that the painting itself demanded it. It was bold. It was colorful. Somehow, along with his blended acrylics -- the off-whites and teals and ochres -- he had managed to mix in his own personal energy. The painting was inescapably compelling. That's exactly the anecdote I tell to anyone who asks me about Kiki's work, and when they ask me where I think he'll be in five, ten, twenty years' time, I tell them, "Right up at the front of the gallery," just where he's always been.