Vik Muniz São Paulo, Brazil, b. 1961
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Photography by Frankie Aldunio -
Vik Muniz is an internationally acclaimed artist and photographer known for his inventive use of unconventional materials and his exploration of the relationship between image, perception, and representation.
Lives and works in New York, NY, USA
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Living and working between Rio de Janeiro and New York, Muniz has forged a distinctive path in contemporary art by transforming the ephemeral into enduring visual statements.
He began his artistic career as a sculptor but soon shifted his focus to drawing and photography. Exploring postmodern strategies—like many of his contemporaries, including Cindy Sherman and Jeff Koons—Muniz engages with familiar cultural imagery, recontextualizing it to emphasize the primacy of concept over form. His work reflects a central tenet of contemporary art: that concept often transcends medium.
Muniz is celebrated for using everyday materials—sugar, chocolate syrup, wire, caviar, toys, dirt, dust, garbage, even magazine clippings—to recreate iconic images from art history. These large-scale, temporary compositions are meticulously assembled and then captured in high-resolution photographs, preserving their intricate detail while simultaneously transforming them into new, standalone works. Through this process, Muniz reinvents the masterpieces of Van Gogh, Picasso, Malevich, Klimt, Mondrian, Matisse, and others with wit and technical virtuosity.
Beyond their visual impact, his works explore the notion of appropriation, the reproducibility of images, and the fluid relationship between medium and message. “I see myself as an observer of the skirmish between structuralist and poststructuralist criticism,” Muniz once remarked, underscoring his intellectual engagement with contemporary theory.
Muniz’s work is grounded in the belief that art should be both socially conscious and widely accessible. Rejecting elitism, he aims to bridge the gap between high art and popular culture, drawing in audiences of all ages and backgrounds. His visual puns, clever material choices, and accessible references spark curiosity while encouraging deeper reflection on social and environmental issues.
In 2006, Muniz began work on one of his most acclaimed projects: the Pictures of Garbage series. Reimagining classical paintings through large-scale images made entirely from waste collected at Jardim Gramacho—the vast landfill on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro—Muniz collaborated with local garbage pickers, who not only sourced materials but also took part in constructing the compositions. These monumental works were assembled in a custom-built studio hangar and photographed from the height of a mobile crane. The resulting images functioned as both striking works of art and poignant social metaphors, addressing themes of labor, marginalization, and environmental degradation.
Simultaneously, Muniz co-produced the documentary Waste Land (2010), which followed the lives of the landfill workers and the evolution of the project. The film garnered international critical acclaim, earning an Academy Award nomination and winning major prizes at the Berlin, Toronto, and Sundance film festivals. Proceeds from the sale of the artworks were donated to the Association of Collectors of the Metropolitan Landfill of Jardim Gramacho, and the landfill was officially closed in 2012.
In 2011, Muniz was named a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador. In 2014, he founded Escola Vidigal, a school of art and technology for underprivileged children in Rio de Janeiro. The following year, he participated in the Gates Foundation’s global health initiative The Art of Saving a Life with his project Colonies, which explored the aesthetics of microscopic life.
Muniz frequently lectures at leading institutions including Oxford, Harvard, and Yale Universities; The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York; The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and other prominent venues such as TED conferences, the World Economic Forum, MIT, and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
Selected Public Collections:
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, United Kingdom
Tate Gallery, London, United KingdomMuseum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York, United States
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, United States
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, United States
International Center of Photography, New York, United States
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, United StatesMuseum of Fine Arts, Boston, United States
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, United States
The Menil Collection, Houston, United StatesMuseum of Modern Art, São Paulo, Brazil
Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilRome Museum of Contemporary Art (MACRO), Rome, Italy
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland
Joan Miró Foundation, Barcelona, Spain
Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv, Israel
The Long Museum, Shanghai, China
Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, Japan -
Works
Vik Muniz São Paulo, Brazil, b. 1961
Mill in sunlight, after Piet Mondrian, 2007Chromogenic print mounted on aluminum246 × 180 cmFurther images
This work from Vik Muniz's Pictures of Pigment series is an appropriation of Piet Mondrian’s Mill in Sunlight (1908). The windmill, a recurring motif in Mondrian’s work, inspired him to...This work from Vik Muniz's Pictures of Pigment series is an appropriation of Piet Mondrian’s Mill in Sunlight (1908).
The windmill, a recurring motif in Mondrian’s work, inspired him to create one of his most notable pieces in the luminist style. This painting, which captures the Dutch countryside in vibrant colors, is perhaps the clearest example of his luminist approach, where the technical mastery of light and color blends with a deeper, spiritual essence. The intense sunlight bathes the landscape, reflecting both the external beauty of the countryside and the transcendent quality Mondrian sought to convey.
Exhibitions
'Vik Muniz', Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Moscow. Jun 8–Sep 8 2018Exhibitions-
Vik Muniz
Personal Exhibition 8 Jun - 10 Oct 2018Read more > -
Persona Grata
Group exhibition 1 Mar - 21 Apr 2010Read more > -
Vik Muniz. Russian Project
Personal Exhibition 1 Nov 2007 - 30 Jan 2008Read more > -
Create Your Own Museum
Group Exhibition 24 Jan - 1 Mar 2007Read more > -
We Can Do It
Group Exhibition 10 Feb - 15 May 2005Read more >
PublicationsViewing RoomsVideo
