Vladimir Zambrano
His work reflects on the transformation of experience through image and the everyday.
Mexican visual artist and graphic designer from Mexico City whose practice is structured around transformation, impermanence, and the relationships we establish with objects, environments, and daily experience. His work draws from diverse references — Asian graphic traditions, scientific illustration, and popular visual culture — and is grounded in the use of emptiness, the tension between the unfinished and the refined, and process as an essential condition of the artwork. Through observations of urban landscapes, personal archives, and what often remains unseen, he creates images that activate memory, emotion, and symbolic reflection.
He studied at the Metropolitan Autonomous University and joined Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City, in 2008, where he developed graphic identities for more than twenty exhibitions and contributed to editorial and curatorial projects. His work has been exhibited at Museo Franz Mayer, Museo del Objeto (MODO), CENART, and Museo de la Ciudad de México, and is part of private collections abroad. He has received national design awards and currently works as a cultural advisor.