- Naixement
- Lloc
Tomás Pichardo-Espaillat
Tomás Pichardo-Espaillat (b. 1987, Santo Domingo) is a storyteller from the Dominican Republic. Working primarily on video, animation and drawing. He was granted a full year scholarship at Fabrica, Benetton's Design Research center, in Treviso, Italy in 2013. Tomás received his BFA in Art and Media at Parsons, the New School of Design in 2010. And his AA degree in fine arts, at Altos de Chavón, in 2008.
Pichardo's work has hints of magic realism. Evoking the colorful, surreal and sometimes disorienting experience of growing up in the Caribbean. His world is personal and intimate, with characters full of colors and textures, drawn into situations outside of their comfort zone. Recent solo exhibitions include CasaQuien (DR), Centro de la Imagen (DR) and Fabrica Features (Lisbon, Portugal). And he has had work included in group exhibitions at the Triennale di Milano (Italy), Museum for Contemporary Art, (México) and Annecy Animation Film Festival (France).
Com a direcció
When did we start using passports?
Olivia y las nubes
One of the most dangerous men in American history
Radio Venceremos
Las Mariposas: How Three Sisters defied a Dictator
What really happened during the Attica Prison Rebellion
The Secret Society of the Great Dismal Swamp
Can Love and Independence Coexist?
El Club de Chichiguas
The last chief of the Comanches and the fall of an empire
Asterisco
El Regreso al Planeta M
The life, legacy & assassination of an African revolutionary
The Rise and Fall of History's First Empire
Midnight's Children
Pequeñas Historias Sobre la Soledad
Why Should You Read Sci-fi Superstar Octavia E. Butler?
Harvey Milk's radical vision of equality
The Aztec myth of the unlikeliest sun god
Divine Comedy
The 1937 Haitian Massacre
Waiting for Godot
The psychology of post-traumatic stress disorder
El Camino Interminable
El Vendedor de Muchachas de Cartón
The science of skin color
What is abstract expressionism?
Is graffiti art? Or vandalism?
The Neuroscience of Imagination
Why It Is So Hard to Live in the Present?