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2018, Panorama
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6 pages
1 file
Abstract: This study analyzes a new exhibition on insufficiently recognized, major Latina artists, left out of the discourses on Latin American and U.S. Chicana/o and Latina/o art. Specific examples and background history for the artists is provided by the authors (also the exhibits' curators), with attention to archives and the fields of art history and Chicana/o and Latina/o studies; concluding interrogations for future studies. “Latina Art through the Lens of Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985” (co-authored with Marcela Guerrero), Diálogo, Center for Latino Research, DePaul University, Chicago, Fall 2017.
This essay gives an overview of the way Latin American and Latina artists have been greatly excluded by art history and curatorial accounts.
Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture, 2023
This Dialogues takes the 2017–18 exhibition Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960–1985 as a starting point to discuss Latin American art today, addressing its history, legacy, and contribution to positive social change through the prism of feminism. Seeking to challenge hegemonic readings of the categories of “Latin America” and “feminism” while reinstating the contribution of Latin American women, Latina/Latinx, and Chicana/Chicanx artists to art and critical thought today, the exhibition Radical Women proposed novel ways of displaying art from the region by embracing multiplicity, attending to the particularity of different contexts, and bringing to the fore common threads of critical and creative practice. Building on that premise, these contributions expand on the original exhibition’s time frame and consider the persistence of feminism and its changing status in Latin American art after 1985. They explore recent artistic practices, curatorial projects, and art historical scholarship; reflect on strategies of display, audience engagement, societal concerns, and epistemological premises; and consider different ways of conceptualizing Latin American and feminist identities, legacies, and genealogies today. By doing so, this Dialogues seeks to enrich and diversify our understanding of past and current practices, as well as highlight the intricate connections and resonances that exist between the two. Contributions by curators (Fajardo-Hill, Rjeille), scholars (Fernández, Lamoni), and artists (Antivilo, Motta) span issues in political activism, ecology, technology, education, genealogy, colonization, heritage, and memory. What emerges is a sense of the field’s present concerns and the ways this is shaping the future direction of feminism in Latin American art and art history.
Diálogo a tres voces sobre arte feminismo y activismo
Artelogie, 2013
Art History, 2021
Arts 2019, 8(4), 137, 2019
Stemming from Grosfoguel's decolonial discourse, and particularly his enquiry on how to steer away from the alternative between Eurocentric universalism and third world fundamentalism in the production of knowledge, this article aims to respond to this query in relation to the field of the art produced by Latin American women artists in the past four decades. It does so by investigating the decolonial approach advanced by third world feminism (particularly scholar Chandra Talpade Mohanty) and by rescuing it from-what I reckon to be-a methodological impasse. It proposes to resolve such an issue by reclaiming transnational feminism as a way out from what I see as a fundamentalist and essentialist tactic. Following from a theoretically and methodological introduction, this essay analyzes the practice of Cuban-born artist Marta María Pérez Bravo, specifically looking at the photographic series Para Concebir (1985-1986); it proposes a decolonial reading of her work, which merges third world feminism's nation-based approach with a transnational outlook, hence giving justice to the migration of goods, ideas, and people that Ella Shohat sees as deeply characterizing the contemporary cultural background. Finally, this article claims that Pérez Bravo's oeuvre offers the visual articulation of a decolonial strategy, concurrently combining global with local concerns.
Art Journal, 2019
In this essay I will sketch a panorama of female artistic culture in Buenos Aires between 1890 and 1910. My main hypothesis is connected to the visibility of women artists in porteño culture at the turn of the last century. My goals are twofold: to recover artistic careers marginalized by the discipline and to contribute to a critical analysis of the ways in which women artists of this period entered art histories. To that end, I will focus on three tasks. First, I will delineate the characteristics assumed by the figure of the woman artist in this period, seeking to show the high degree of visibility achieved by art students and professional artists. Second, I will analyze the figure of the sculptor Lola Mora (1866–1936) in the context of the creation of a mythical heroine while other women artists of her generation were rendered invisible. Finally, I will contrast the commonplaces by which national artistic literature has sought to understand women artists with an examination of a chosen group of careers, works, and significant episodes, which help to imagine new roles for women artists of the past. Analysis of the modes of inclusion and exclusion of women artists in histories of art contributes to dismantling the stereotypes with which the discipline has understood and pigeonholed female production.
Without Restraint: Works by Mexican Women Artists from the Daros Latinamerica Collection, 2016
From a woman’s perspective in Mexico: provocative works of Latin American Conceptualism Women artists in Mexico present their lifeworld from a decidedly female point of view and respond to international artistic movements with very different approaches: works by Teresa Serrano (*1936), Ximena Cuevas (*1963), Betsabeé Romero (*1963), Teresa Margolles (*1963), Claudia Fernández (*1965), Melanie Smith (*1965), and Maruch Sántiz Gómez (*1975) constitute the core of this publication. The photographs, videos, objects, and installations from the holdings of the Daros Latinamerica Collection in Zurich take a subversive look at Mexico’s national identity. The works call prevailing hierarchies of power into question, including their associated traditional functions as well as the social spaces of women within Mexican society. The apparent banality of everyday things and actions—both in the domestic-private as well as the urban-public sphere—experiences new, deeper meaning and is in part ironically broken. Exhibition: Kunstmuseum Bern 3.6.–23.10.2016 Catalog Edited by Valentina Locatelli Publishing house: Hatje Cantz With texts by Matthias Frehner, Valentina Locatelli, Alma Ruiz, and interviews with Hans-Michael Herzog, Maruch Sántiz Gómez, Teresa Serrano and Betsabeé Romero Edition in German and English; 176 pages, 64 images. *** Aus der Perspektive der Frau in Mexiko: provokative Arbeiten des lateinamerikanischen Konzeptualismus Künstlerinnen in Mexiko präsentieren ihre Lebenswelt in dezidiert weiblicher Sicht und antworten auf internationale künstlerische Strömungen mit ganz eigenen Ansätzen: Arbeiten von Teresa Serrano (*1936), Ximena Cuevas (*1963), Betsabeé Romero (*1963), Teresa Margolles (*1963), Claudia Fernández (*1965), Melanie Smith (*1965) und Maruch Sántiz Gómez (*1975) bilden den Kern dieser Publikation. Die Fotografien, Videos, Objekte und Installationen aus dem Bestand der Daros Latinamerica Collection in Zürich werfen einen subversiven Blick auf die nationale Identität Mexikos. Die Arbeiten stellen herrschende Machthierarchien und die ihnen zugeordneten traditionellen Funktionen sowie die sozialen Räume von Frauen innerhalb der mexikanischen Gesellschaft in Frage. Dabei erfährt die scheinbare Banalität alltäglicher Dinge und Aktionen – sowohl im häuslichen-privaten als auch im urban-öffentlichen Bereich – eine neue, tiefere Bedeutung und teils ironische Brechung. Ausstellung: Kunstmuseum Bern 3.6.–23.10.2016
Sandro Mezzadra (2024). Politica di classe. Un problema marxiano e le sue metamorfosi. PAROLECHIAVE, 11, 73-83.
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