Latin American street art blends history, politics, and identity into powerful public expression. From Bogotá to São Paulo, walls tell stories that cannot be ignored.
Elsy Tavarez is a museum director at LUAG who spreads her passion for culture and art through different workshops.
Carla Stellweg in Cuernavaca in August 2024 (photo by and courtesy Tessa Morefield) Carla Stellweg, the fearless curator and writer who shifted the very ground of Mexican contemporary art at a ...
Kinesthesia: Latin American Kinetic Art, 1954-1969 examines the influential and visually stunning work of South American kinetic artists. While Southern California was becoming the North American ...
One of the fair’s most elegant small booths belonged to the nine-year-old Lisbon-based Galeria Foco, with its suspended ...
Latin American art scholar Estrellita B. Brodsky has curated an exhibition called “Second Skin,” showing 30 works of art from 1950 to know, highligting how fashion is a form of storytelling. ByNadja ...
Brazil’s largest art fair showcases local identity as regional galleries capitalise on shifting international attention ...
ESTE ARTE’s deliberately small scale has helped position the fair as an early bellwether for Latin America’s contemporary art market. Courtesy Este Arte In the middle of the southern hemisphere’s ...
1. Forerunners and independents -- 2. The first modern movements -- 3. Mexican muralism -- 4. Muralism beyond Mexico -- 5. The exiles -- 6. Mexico : four women and one man -- 7. A climate of change -- ...