Ivette Román-Roberto, also known as Ivette Román, is a Puerto Rican performer and experimental vocalist known for her work in extended voice performance and free improvisation.[1][2][3] She has been performing nationally and internationally since the 1980s, and has been recognized by the National Association of Latino Arts and Culture.[4] According to the Houston Press, "Ivette is the secret weapon of Houston experimental music."[5]

Ivette Román-Roberto
OriginPuerto Rico
Occupation(s)Musician, performance artist
Years active1980s–present
Websitehttps://ivetteromanroberto.com/

Early life and education

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As an adolescent, Román-Roberto received six years of training in piano, viola, and music technique at the Escuela Libre de Música in Puerto Rico.[6] She then received a BA in Art Education at the University of Puerto Rico and completed 32 credits toward an MFA in Theater Arts at the University of California, Los Angeles. She received an MEd in Arts in Education from Cambridge College in Boston, Massachusetts, in 2004.

Performance career

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Román began her career as an experimental vocalist in the Los Angeles Poverty Department (LAPD).[7] This group was founded by off-Broadway director John Malpede and involved the collaboration of homeless persons from poor neighborhoods with a small group of resident artists. LAPD made a significant impact within the Californian Performance Art movement of the 1980s. After this experience, Román began to do live presentations in California, and then returned to Puerto Rico in the early 1990s, where she was an active participant in the cultural scene of the Island, collaborating with artist such as Freddie Mercado, Luis Amed Irizarry, Aravind Enrique Adyanthaya, and José Luis Abreu (Fofé) from the rock band Circo. Adyanthaya discusses some of these collaborations in an interview with the scholar Melanie Pérez Ortiz in 2004, focusing on Matropofagia (1999), Lajas (2003), and Íconos de vellonera.[8] In the 2000s Román moved to Houston, Texas, where she currently resides, but she continues to perform in Puerto Rico periodically. In 2021-2022, she formed part of the Novenario exhibit at the Puerto Rico Museum of Contemporary Art.[9] Her work has been analyzed by performance studies scholars such as Lydia Platón Lázaro,[10] Marina Barsy Janer,[11] and Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes.[12]

Performance style

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Román-Roberto has stated that her "voice work has gone through a slow but consistent change since the beginning of [her] art career, from strongly performative to minimalist, with a continuous unresolved tension that has to do with challenging the colonial programming inherited through my upbringing while at the same time keeping an almost religious loyalty and reverence to some components of that programming." She also indicates that "My voice is my art venue, the space I create to give myself an opportunity within the art world. Voice improvisation is the portal to the place where there are no limitations and I can be the person I always wanted to be outside the script of discrimination."[13]

Hummus Terroristas Todos

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Román-Roberto's vocal and body performance style is apparent in her performance Hummus Terroristas Todos, which was published by the Cuban theater journal Conjunto in 2009, with an introduction by the noted theater critic Vivian Martínez Tabares.[14][15] Hummus Terroristas Todos has also been analyzed by the Puerto Rican theater and performance studies scholar Jade Power-Sotomayor, who discusses this performance in her 2012 dissertation "Speaking Bodies: Body Bilinguality and Code-switching in Latina/o Performance."[16] Power-Sotomayor highlights the interplay between Román-Roberto's voice, body, and the movement of her hands, indicating that "Through a simple yet culturally-specific gesture, Román uses her body to situate herself as gendered, Puerto Rican, racialized, and colonized, inviting the audience to identify with her, participate and enjoy this moment of recognition. Yet through this same gesture, she actively resists, questions and destabilizes these categories of belonging, demonstrating how her body can confuse the space between the literal and the figurative, be both an object of social power and an agent with a performative oppositional power" (18-19).

Performances/Compositions

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  • 1995 – Las Voces del Maleficio (Biennial of Visual Poetry, UNAM, Mexico City and Rompeforma Performance Marathon, Fine Arts Center, Puerto Rico)
  • 1997 – Sinfonia del Silencio con Cuatro Movimientos Necesarios (Sound Poetry Festival Bologna, Italy, and the Laryngitis Festival in San Juan, Puerto Rico)
  • 1998 – I Love You with All my Heart (Batie Festival, Geneva, Switzerland)
  • 1998 – Cuatrienio (100 años después… 100 artistas contemporáneos: reflexiones en torno a la presencia norteamericana, San Juan, Puerto Rico)[17]
  • 1999 – Matropofagia by Mayra Santos-Febres (lead performer, with Lydia Platón, San Germán, Puerto Rico)[18]
  • 2001 – Sinfonia Comic Guitar (Second Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics Encuentro in Monterrey, Mexico)
  • 2002 – Círculo (Third Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics Encuentro in Lima, Peru)
  • 2005 – Hummus Terroristas Todos (Mixta Con Tod@s, Teatro Estudio Yerbabruja, Río Piedras, Puerto Rico)[16]
  • 2008 – Living Room Art: "Brown in the Third Ward" (showcasing artist, Houston, Texas)[19]
  • 2015 – Directed Réquiem, a community singing project, at Patio Taller in Carolina, Puerto Rico.[20]
  • 2019 – Singer/activator for Okwui Okpokwasili’s Sitting on a Man's Head (CounterCurrent Festival)
  • 2019 – Played a part for filmmaker Beatriz Santiago Muñoz’s production Verano de Mujeres

Awards and fellowships

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  • 1994 – Merit Award from Fondo Nacional Para El Financiamiento Del Quehacer Cultural of the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture[6]
  • 1995 – Travel Fellowship to participate as a performer in Spain: PSBA Program, Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña[6]
  • 1997 – Affiliation Certificate given by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture as national cantautora (singer-songwriter)[6]
  • 2000 – Felisa Rincón de Gautier Foundation fellowship to do the political cabaret show, Círculo, at the Sylvia Rexach Café-Teatro; Performing Arts Center of Puerto Rico[6]
  • 2001 – Travel Fellowship of the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture to participate in the Encounter of Latin American Performance Artists, Mexico, as a performer and panel guest[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Torres Narváez, Beliza. "An Interview with Puerto Rican Performance Artist Ivette Román." Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics, New York University, 2002, retrieved July 1, 2021.
  2. ^ Radio San Juan (Interview by Shanti Lalita). "La Probeta – Ivette Roman." Soundcloud, 2016, retrieved July 1, 2021.
  3. ^ "Meet Ivette Roman-Roberto: Experimental Vocalist and Community Artist." Shoutout HTX, September 28, 2022, retrieved October 11, 2022.
  4. ^ "Ivette Román-Roberto." National Association of Latino Arts and Culture, retrieved June 28, 2021.
  5. ^ Jansen, Steve. "They, Who Sound Experimental Music Returns, and Now It's at Lawndale." Houston Press, January 23, 2018, retrieved June 28, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Artist CV". Ivette Román-Roberto, retrieved May 12, 2021.
  7. ^ "Ivette Roman: Circulo." Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics, 3rd Encuentro: Globalization, Migration and Public Sphere, Lima, Peru, July 5–13, 2002, retrieved May 12, 2021.
  8. ^ Pérez Ortiz, Melanie. "Áravind Adyanthaya: Códigos universales y locales", in Palabras encontradas: Antología personal de escritores puertorriqueños de los últimos 20 años (Conversaciones). San Juan: Ediciones Callejón, 2008. 181-196. ISBN 1881748618
  9. ^ "Karen Langevin, Lydia Platón, Lilianna Rivera, Ivette Román, and Paloma Todd." Creative Capital, 14 April 2020. https://creative-capital.org/on_our_radar/karen-langevin-lydia-platon-lilianna-rivera-and-paloma-todd/
  10. ^ Platón Lázaro, Lydia. "Screaming Soundscapes: The Sounds of Puerto Rican Contemporary Performance in the Work of Teresa Hernández and Ivette Román." In The Body, the Dance and the Text: Essays on Performance and the Margins of History, edited by Brynn Wein Shiovitz. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 2019. ISBN 1476671893
  11. ^ Barsy Janer, Marina. "Tricksters of the Spectatorial: The Decolonial Proposals of Performance Artivism through the encounters with La Pocha Nostra and Freddie Mercado." PhD thesis, University of Essex, 2018. http://repository.essex.ac.uk/22409/.
  12. ^ La Fountain-Stokes, Lawrence. Translocas: The Politics of Puerto Rican Drag and Trans Performance. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2021. ISBN 9780472074273
  13. ^ "About the Artist." Ivette Román-Roberto, retrieved May 12, 2021.
  14. ^ Román, Ivette. "Hummus Terroristas Todos." Conjunto 151–152 (April–June 2009), 50–53, retrieved July 1, 2021.
  15. ^ Martínez Tabares, Vivian. "De la escena latina en los Estados Unidos." Conjunto 151–152 (April–June 2009), 2–3, retrieved July 1, 2021.
  16. ^ a b Power-Sotomayor, Jade. "Speaking Bodies: Body Bilinguality and Code-switching in Latina/o Performance." PhD dissertation, University of California, San Diego, 2012, retrieved July 1, 2021. Pages 17–19.
  17. ^ Fermaint, Renia. "Los Cien veintiún años después: Arte y nación." 90 grados, November 12, 2019, retrieved July 1, 2021.
  18. ^ Santana Mojica, Carmelo. "El teatro puertorriqueño: Industrialización y diversificación." Latin American Theatre Review 34.1 (Fall 2000): 193–209.
  19. ^ Rhodes, Dusti. "Living Room Art: 'Brown in the Third Ward.'" Houston Press, September 25, 2008, retrieved July 1, 2021.
  20. ^ La Fountain-Stokes, Lawrence. "REQUIEM a la Tía Alex en Patio Taller." Lola von Miramar, December 23, 2015, retrieved May 12, 2021.