Founded by Raysa Raquel Rodríguez García and Sharon “Chachi” González Colón, Moriviví is the feminist art collective that has produced more than thirty murals on the island and seven collective murals with the Puerto Rican diaspora in the United States.
Read MoreEditor, translator, and art consultant Tess O’Dwyer joins Miguel Trelles in his studio at The Clemente.
Read MoreThe practices in ‘Subversive Kin’ link past and present through reimagination, reclamation, and grounding, by turning over invisibility systems.
Read MoreThrough Juan Chico, artist Adriana Chavez’s performances walks us through Catholic rites and myths in conversation with globalization, misogyny, and Mexican cultural practices.
Read More‘What is Real?’ features the work of local and international artists in a half-empty home situated in Prospect Park South, Brooklyn aptly named ‘The Real House’.
Read MoreDrawing from their on-going research that subverts coloniality's sign systems, Mooses' and Cortes' installation raised questions of belonging, movements and immigration, presence and absence.
Read MoreArtist Alexander Hernandez explores intersectional identities rooted in immigrant experiences, gender expectations, HIV+ survival, and queer sensibilities
Read MoreMonika Bravo is the first female Latinx artist to enter the Landmarks collection at the University of Texas at Austin.
Read MoreA few months back, author and professor Edgar Garcia spoke about his practice and recently published book, ‘Signs of the Americas: A Poetics of Pictography, Hieroglyphs, and Khipu’ with students and alumni of The Cooper Union School of Art.
Read MoreRepresenting a timeless odyssey of Latinx movement between political refuse and material refuge- the immersive exhibition is a culmination of the artist’s career and her visionary work to date.
Read MoreIn ‘Latinx Art’, award winning scholar and activist Arlene Dávila returns to and greatly expands on her early work excavating and troubling ethnoracialized museumscapes in the Americas.
Read MoreA conversation with Brazilian artist Bel Falleiros on her work and her sculpture ‘America (un)known’ which gestures towards unison, reconcilement, and hope.
Read MoreThe annual Austin Studio Tour features over 420 participating artists while combining the East and West Austin Studio Tours in an online experience.
Read MoreCurated by Tiago de Abreu Pinto, the public art project brought together artists who reflected on the current climate—between quarantine and political processes—finding new ways of understanding art making and exhibitions.
Read MoreEpisode 2 of ‘¡El Arte no Calla!’, a new monthly Spanish-language podcast that explores art, freedom of expression, and human rights in Latin America.
Read MoreIt is likely that Juan Sánchez has been able to evade patterns of social constraint by focusing, from the start of his career, on the political aspects of his background. The renowned Nuyorican artist remains vital to contemporary art.
Read MoreEpisode 1 of ‘¡El Arte no Calla!’, a new monthly Spanish-language podcast that explores art, freedom of expression, and human rights in Latin America.
Read MoreMostras, pedagogies of failure, queer socratism, degeneration, illegitimacy, drags, comparsas, street action, eco-somatic practices, a betrayal on grammar, and a politics of contagion.
Read MoreThe Virus Manifesto is an interspecies political calling towards a reality infected by the virus.
Read MoreA discussion with the new Executive Director of The Clemente.
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