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María Fernanda Cardoso

María Fernanda Cardoso
Born 1963 (age 53–54)
Nationality Colombian / Australian
Notable work Cardoso Flea Circus, Cementerio—Vertical Garden
Website mariafernandacardoso.com

María Fernanda Cardoso (born 1963) is a Colombian Australian artist, sculptor and illustrator. Her contemporary art references many types of ready-made material, including plastic, trash, plants, dried and living animals, bones and styrofoam. One of her most famous art installations was a flea circus that featured live cat fleas. Her works have been featured in several museums internationally in Europe, the Americas, and Australia, and have won several awards. She resides in Sydney.

In the early 1980s, Cardoso studied architecture and the visual arts at the University of the Andes in Bogotá. She moved to New York in 1987 to attend the Graduate Sculpture Program at the Pratt Institute. In 1990, she graduated with a Master of Fine Arts in Sculpture and Installation at Yale University.

In 2000, the Museum of Modern Art in New York commissioned her to create a major installation for their millennium show, "Modern Starts". Here she installed 36,000 plastic lilies in a 125-foot long wall, which subsequently toured museums throughout the United States. In 2003, she represented Colombia at the Venice Biennale, exhibiting a large installation of starfish woven together into a submarine landscape called "Woven Water".

Cardozo moved to Sydney, Australia, in 1997. She did a solo exhibition in 2011 at Melbourne's Arc One gallery centered on the genitalia of male insects. The exhibit was titled 'It’s not size that matters, it is shape'. The following year, she created The Museum of Copulatory Organs for her doctoral project in 2012, which culminated in a Ph.D. from Sydney College of the Arts.

Cardoso created a flea circus that included the following "performers" and "stuntfleas": Harry Fleadini, an escape artist; Samson and Delilah, fleas that lifted cotton ball weights; Teeny and Tiny, tightrope walkers; Pipita and Pepon, a flea couple who pushed luminescent balls on a wire; and Brutus, who pulled a locomotive. Cardoso guided the behavior of the fleas by reward; when they behaved as desired, she let them feed directly on her blood. As Cardoso explained, "It's one of the hardest thing in life to train fleas, it took six years and it requires a lot of patience, no one knew how to train fleas anymore".


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