Gisela Colón
Gisela Colón is a Puerto Rican international artist whose works traverse land interventions, sculpture, painting, video, and photography. Her practice of organic minimalism addresses the entanglement of ecological phenomena, personal and ancestral memory, and the relationship between cultural anthropology and the natural world.
Early life and education
Colón was born in Vancouver, Canada, in 1966 to a German mother and Puerto Rican father. Her mother was a painter who studied languages and art at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, and her father was a scientist who obtained a Ph.D. in chemistry from the Simon Fraser University, Vancouver. She was raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico since the age of one, and attended the University of Puerto Rico, graduating magna cum laude in 1987 with a B.A. in economics, after receiving a 1986 Congressional Scholarship Award by the Harry S. Truman Foundation. Colón moved to Los Angeles in 1987 to pursue graduate studies, receiving a Juris Doctor degree from the Southwestern University School of Law in 1990.Early work
Colón began her career as a painter, exhibiting abstract works from 2005 through 2011.. In 2012, Colón moved into sculpture, focusing on perceptual phenomena.Organic Minimalism
Organic Minimalism is a term of art coined in 2018 by Colón to describe her artistic practice of imbuing organic lifelike qualities into a vocabulary of minimal reductive forms, expanding and deconstructing the traditional male-dominated canon of minimalism and Light and Space. The practice of Organic Minimalism is said to draw raw energy from visible and invisible worlds, incorporating as materia prima the laws of physics, the intrinsic life force emanating from planet Earth, the powerful generative forces radiating throughout the cosmological realm, and the sublime mysteries of the quantum universe beyond.Colón’s work is grounded in a worldview that links feminist philosophy, ecological vitality, and material transformation. She interprets feminism not as a narrow sociopolitical category but as a universal life force, extending beyond human experience to include plants, animals, and planetary ecosystems. Her emphasis on interconnected energy reflects a belief that all organic and inorganic matter participates in a continuous cycle of emergence and regeneration.
This expanded feminist framework is informed by Colón’s upbringing in Puerto Rico, where she experienced nature as a dynamic, abundant presence. She frequently cites the resilience of the natural world—such as a weed breaking through asphalt—as an emblem of feminine generative power. Colón views her sculptures as conduits for this force: objects that embed light, activate space, and signal transformation.
Work
Colón's oeuvre encompasses several distinct sculptural forms: Pods, Monoliths, Slabs, Light Portals, and Unidentified Objects. The through-line in all of Colón's work is the concept of the "mutable object." Influenced by Donald Judd's ideas and writings, such as his seminal essay "Specific Objects", Colón refers to her works as "non-specific objects" to highlight their deliberate fluid indeterminacy. The sculptures are conceived as "non-specific objects" that transmute their physical qualities through fluctuating movement, varied lighting, changing environmental conditions, and the passage of time.Pods
Colón produces incandescent sculptures generally referred to as "Pods." In 2012 Colón began working with plastics, developing a unique fabrication process of blow-molding and layering various acrylic materials. This industrial process creates dynamic sculptures that fluctuate in appearance, emanating light and color inherently from within. The Pods shift color and form before the viewers' eyes depending on lighting, and the viewers' choice of location.Monoliths
Colón creates large-scale floor-based sculptures called "Monoliths," 12-foot tall vertical singular-form sculptures, engineered with aerospace technology, possessing no lines, corners, edges, or demarcations, conceived as pure form to denote clarity and aesthetic purity. The Monoliths have "allusive shimmering surfaces" that have been described as "phallic shaped pieces," "ambiguous works that defy categorization. The pieces have a presence and a resonance, and Colón succeeds in fashioning unsolvable optical illusions that inspire wonder far beyond their formal properties."Representing a new direction for Colón, the Monolith sculptures are 12-foot-tall iridescent pillars that "succeed in providing viewers with a dramatic perceptual experience...Radiant, elegant and pristine, manage to be both strong and sensuous.
The first Monolith of this series, created in 2016, is in the permanent collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
In 2017 Colón created the Parabolic Monolith, a monumental sculptural form towering 15 feet high, described by art critic Christopher Knight, "like the flattened nose-cones of an airplane or science-fiction starship….Undeniably eye-catching, these giant luxury objects press technological craftsmanship to an extreme degree."