top of page

About

CV

Education

2009 - 2013 Otis College of Art & Design

 

Grants & Awards 

2020, 2019, 2018, 2017 -  California Association of Museums Fellowship through the Getty

Exhibitions & Festivals

2018- Mirroring Resillience Residency

2017- Chigonas Ave. 50 Gallery

2016 - Aztlan DA Center for the Arts

2013 - Otis Senior Show

 

Publications

2020 - California Association of Museums Case Study; Museums Role in Traditional Education.

2016 - Community Works Institute; Using Art and Service-Learning for Social Change in Los Angeles

Aida Lugo

Aida Lugo is a multidisciplinary artist from California. She was born in 1990, in Pomona, on the outskirts of Los Angeles County. Here, Aida was introduced to an art scene consisting of an artists’ colony, galleries, museums and all only a short bus ride away from downtown Los Angeles. Inspired by the idea that artists were an important staple in history and her community she began to make art at an early age. Aida began taking photos and making paintings and collage art and soon took interest in sculpture using found objects, wire and salt dough clays. She took internships in the Pomona arts colony and took classes the summer between secondary and high school. Naturally, she attended The School of Arts and Enterprise, a project based charter school, located in Pomona’s arts’ colony. At the SAE, she took classes in ceramics, theatre, creative writing and fine arts. Upon graduating in 2009, she decided to further her education at Otis College of Art and Design. 

 

While at Otis, Aida honed a sculpture installation practice majoring in Sculpture New Genres with a concentration in community arts engagement. New Genres is an all-encompassing major that explores contemporary clay, video, film and public practice. Aida’s work strives to start a dialogue about meditation and dreamlike states, our past as an evolving species and our relationship to the material and natural world.

 

Today Aida is a teaching artist who lives in Pomona. She teaches in the education and studio programs at The American Museum For Ceramic Art and also teaches at the DA Center for the Arts. Aida’s teaching philosophy as an artist is that it is an artists’ social responsibility to teach art and inform the public of ones’ work and that of other artist to make art accessible for all. 

bottom of page