Guto Ajayu

Life with gold is better | Guto Ajayu

1.674
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Measurements
33 x 65 cm
Discipline
Pintura
Styles
Neofiguración
Supports
Madera
Techniques
Acrílico |
Rotulador |
Esmalte |
Brillantina
Year
2020
Unique work
In private collection
"Life with gold is better" is a study of Persian culture and shows us two golden pumas facing each other, symbolizing strength and hierarchy. The abundance and opulence of civilizations have a very special and particular language, as they show material goods, in some way, linked to spiritual goods. This philosophy has given rise to theories that support emperors, kings, and the like as divine sons or heirs, with a high spiritual level, and therefore, deserving of earthly wealth. The synthesis of all this assumption is summarized in the idea that life, with gold, is better. The piece comes framed with a yellow wooden frame

Price evolution

Guto Ajayu

Guto Ajayu (Bolivia–Spain, 1990) is a visceral artist whose practice is articulated around a radical investigation into the animal identity that underlies human nature. His work explores raw qualities such as aggression, sexual impulse, violence, and delirium not as deviations, but as constitutive forces of the contemporary subject. From a deeply introspective perspective, his work functions as an exercise in self-analysis and confrontation with those primary instincts that persist in genetic and cultural memory, conditioning our ways of being and relating to each other. Trained in a turbulent social context and symbolically linked to totemic territories, he constructs an imaginary where the body is presented as a space of truth and knowledge. Strength and aggression appear in his practice not as gestures of domination, but as states of extreme lucidity and presence. He vindicates the figure of the dangerous and tempered individual, one who has traversed their own limits and recognizes in the wild a lucid and sacred condition. The totem acts as a symbolic axis connecting animality, myth, and ritual, giving rise to dystopian counter-narratives charged with irony, new symbolism, and a marked urban aesthetic. Physical action—tension, the blow, the effort—acquires a ceremonial character in his work, a direct and non-discursive liturgy where the body affirms its presence as a place of experience. Through these gestures, Ajayu proposes a radical way of being in the world, in which the wild becomes an aesthetic of instinct and a critical tool against the fragility of the contemporary subject. He has exhibited in institutions such as the Venice Biennale, the National Museum of Art of Bolivia, the Tambo Quirquincho Museum, the Museum of the Ducal Palace of Medinaceli, the Royal Academy of Art in London, and the Conde Duque Center, as well as in galleries and international fairs in cities such as Paris, London, Hong Kong, Madrid, Mexico City, Amsterdam, Rome, Monaco, and La Paz. His work is part of public and institutional collections of the Plurinational State of Bolivia and numerous private collections in Europe, America, Asia, and Oceania.

Financial information

Signature value

28.29

Accum. revaluation

145.86 %