Catalina Aranguren

She | Her | Hers

Jersey City, NJ | Occupying the unceded land of the Munsee Lenape peoples

Artist Statement

My work is a dialogue about the modern world and our place in it. Light is the foundation and sets the tone of the conversation. My work explores relationships between the learned and the subconscious. Because of the diversity of cultures in which I grew up, and perhaps in spite of them, my work explores the relationship between perception and cognition. Oftentimes in my work I capture an instant, which forces the viewer to come closer to explore for more detail, or to take a step back to understand the full picture. My work documents mundane life and objects and gives them a scholarly pedestal to perch on.

The Artist and some of her photography at the JCAST HQ show 2019.

| Image Description: Catalina Aranguren, a Columbian woman with medium-length hair, smiles while posing with a wall display of her photography. |

Artist Bio

Catalina Aranguren was born in Bogotá, Colombia. At the age of 5 her parents moved and she was raised in Caracas, Venezuela. She studied K - 12th at the International School there. Growing up, her friends were from everywhere in the world; religion, race, culture and language were not things she was aware of as differences … for her, these things did not define people, it was merely a part of where they came from.

Catalina’s childhood was a constant wavering between languages, cultures, and third and first worlds, on a daily basis. At home, she would sit around the dining table and speak Spanish with her parents, turn, and speak in English to her sister. Catalina moved to Chicago to study photography and design at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and received her BFA. Before she graduated, she did a semester in Europe at the Spéos Photographic Institute in Paris, France.

She is currently raising three bilingual, bicultural, biracial and bustling boys in New Jersey with her husband and their giant dog.

Artwork + Blog Posts

Socially Distant Art Exhibitions + Projects


Blog Posts