Aimee Perez

b. 1955
Havana, Cuba

Aimee Perez is a Cuban American sculptor whose work explores spirituality, human connection, and the emotional truths that shape our lives. Through expressive figurative sculpture and mixed media, Perez creates powerful archetypal forms that reflect on suffering and redemption, grief and comfort, and the resilience of the human spirit. The artist lives and works in Miami, Florida.

Featured Works

Las Hilanderas | The Spinners
from the series Intus
mixed media
25 x 18 x 10 in
Aimee Perez
contact for pricing

That Little Dresss
From the series : Fragments of A Woman
mixed media
37 x 18 x 16 in
Aimee Perez
contact for pricing

A mixed media sculpture titled Star Spangled Banner, contemporary Cuban artist Aimee Perez for Conde Contemporary.

The Star Spangled Banner
from the series Fictitious Passengers on an Imaginary Journey
mixed media
35 x 15 x 12 in
Aimee Perez
contact for pricing

A mixed media sculpture of a child's dress by contemporary Cuban sculptor Aimee Perez, for Conde Contemporary.

That Little Dresss
From the series : Fragments of A Woman
mixed media
37 x 18 x 16 in
Aimee Perez
contact for pricing

Aimee Perez

Aimee Perez was born in La Habana Cuba in 1955. She left for the United States when she was twelve with her family through the Freedom Flights and grew up in Miami in the Cuban immigrant community.

As a young adult she won the Gold Key Award in painting and several honorable mentions as she continued her pursuit of the arts during her college years. In 1989 she moved to Mexico City and continued painting and exhibiting with Cuban and Mexican artists. In 1997 she was invited to participate as a guest artist in the studio of Mexican sculptor Jose Sacal and it is here she begins to work for the first time in 3D with clay.

She returned to Miami in 2005 and continued her work winning several awards for her figurative ceramics in the state of Florida. Perez has been praised for her command of gestures making her sculptures expressionistic and powerful which combined with the juxtaposition to found objects creates an organic symbiosis.

She says her work is her voice, a dialogue with the observer and simultaneously a self-exploration.

“I work with human forms – with the gestures and emotions, lives and relationships – that serve as archetypes by transcending the context of their story. Through the exploration of contemporary, religious and biblical themes, I create sculptures that explore spiritual truth and the paradoxical truths of suffering and redemption, grief and comfort. The mediums I use include various types of clays fired at high or low temperatures and surfaced with oxides washes, slips, terra sigillata, engobes and glazes. I have also been known to to add encaustic, wax, metals, glass, and found objects to add layers to a piece.” - Aimee Perez

Her work can be found in many private collections in the United States, Europe and Mexico and in permanent collections including The Bennett Women Collection, Florida International University Honors College Collection, Lowe Museum of Art, Huntsville Museum of Art and Museum of Contemporary Arts of the Americas.

More On Aimee Perez

Selected Works

Wood sculpture by Aimee Perez of a woman with a skull-like face, holding a staff, set against a dark background.
The Crucible
Aimee Perez
Three masks with lion faces decorated with fabric and yarn, mounted on black stands with a gray background by Aimee Perez.
Lilith Unearthed
Aimee Perez
A sculpture of a human torso with a face, arms raised above the shoulders, made of textured material resembling bark or rough stone, displayed on a wooden and white pedestal against a dark background.
Deity
Aimee Perez
 
 
An art sculpture resembling a tall humanoid figure with a human face and hand extending upward, made from fabric, rope, and mixed materials, set against a plain gray background.
Diary of A Fall
Aimee Perez
A mixed-media wall sculpture resembling a human face with long hair, created with yarn, fabric, and various objects, mounted on a white wall.
Arachne
Aimee Perez
A sculpture of a human head with a crown of woods and painted red tears, mounted on a wooden stand with red string hanging down.
Red River
Aimee Perez