The Farmers

Artist: Peruko Ccopacatty
Date: 1985
Site Location: Located at the Airport Overlook.
Collection: Individual Sculptures
Description

Peruko Ccopacatty is an internationally acclaimed artist recognized for creating larger-than-life sculptures and public murals that convey themes of family, work, struggle, and triumph. Born on Lake Titicaca in the Andes of Peru, Ccopacatty is an indigenous artist of Aymara descent. His work expresses his personal identification with his rich cultural heritage while focusing on the power of art to express the universal human experience. He attended the National School of Fine Arts in Lima, Peru, graduating in 1976 with the “Medalla de Oro”, the highest honor in sculpture. He immigrated to the United States in 1981 during the Peruvian Conflict to pursue his career as an artist. Norfolk, VA was home to his first exhibitions of public art between 1980—1985, including ‘Farmers’, originally commissioned for the Norfolk Farmer’s Market. Ccopacatty specializes in pieces that mimic the movement of living forms through the insinuation of tendons, bones, and muscles. The fluidity of his work is achieved through his open construction technique and his mastery of metal work. Through the reuse of discarded materials and the transformation of salvaged metal into art, he aims to convey the idea that humans can be a part of the solution to the scarcity of resources and the unintended impacts of progress. Peruko Ccopacatty received the United Nations Society of Writers and Artists Award of Excellence in 2003 for a life’s work of social relevance. He also received the honor of a solo exhibit of sculpture in the main hall of the UN New York headquarters. He believes art is a necessary form of social expression and promotes the coming together of community through shared experience. All of his pieces carry one common thread. We’re in this together. These sculptures were generously donated in memory of Bess and Julius Peck by their extended families.