Selected Summer 2023 ISLAA Writers in Residence Announced

On Now:
Jun 16, 202306.16.23

Manuel Herreros de Lemos, Untitled (Marilin), 1982. Inkjet print on Hahnemühle paper, 10 5/8 x 7 3/8 in. The Manuel Herreros de Lemos and Mateo Manaure Arilla Collection. Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA) Library and Archives.

Summer 2023 Selected Residents

After carefully reviewing dozens of outstanding applications, our selection committee has selected the following six residents for the first open-call based Summer 2023 edition of the ISLAA Writer in Residence program. Congratulations to all upcoming residents!

Please stay tuned for future research opportunities at ISLAA, including the Fall 2023 cycle of the ISLAA Research Grant.

Collection of Artist's Books by Anna Bella Geiger

Maggie Borowitz, University of Chicago

Jorge Lopera, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

The Manuel Herreros de Lemos and Mateo Manaure Arilla Collection

Irene Rihuete-Varea, Brown University

Joseph Shaikewitz, the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University

"El Dibujazo" Collection

Irene García, Boston University

Patricia Roig Canepa, Goldsmiths College, University of London

ISLAA Writer in Residence Summer 2023

The Writer in Residence program offers a first look at newly processed primary sources and provides the opportunity to conduct research on exceptional artists and movements from postwar and contemporary Latin American art.

This summer, selected Writers in Residence will work remotely to explore materials from one of three fully digitized collections from the ISLAA Library and Archives: the Manuel Herreros de Lemos and Mateo Manaure Arilla Collection, a collection of selected artist’s books by Anna Bella Geiger, and the “El Dibujazo” Collection. Residents will produce an essay based on their selected digital collection, in alignment with their own research interests and expertise. Each selected participant will be awarded a $2,000 grant in recognition of these research and writing endeavors.

The application materials required include a research proposal, a CV, and a writing sample. Find out more about residency conditions and submission requirements here.

If you have questions about the ISLAA Writer in Residence program, please email Blanca Serrano Ortiz de Solórzano, ISLAA project director: blanca.serranoortiz@islaa.org.

The three digital collections selected for the Summer 2023 call for proposals are:

The Manuel Herreros de Lemos and Mateo Manaure Arilla Collection

This archival collection includes a restored digital edition of the film TRANS, a 1982 documentary film depicting transgender women in Caracas, shot by Manuel Herreros de Lemos and Mateo Manaure Arilla. Shown publicly only once, at the Cinemateca Nacional de Venezuela in 1983, this rare film pays homage to the testimonies and experiences of transgender women and bears witness to their experiences of transphobia and discrimination. The collection also includes photographic prints taken by Herreros de Lemos during the documentary’s preproduction phase and ephemera related to the film.

All written documents and ephemera in this collection are in Spanish.

Artist’s books by Anna Bella Geiger

This collection comprises seventeen artist’s books by Brazilian conceptual artist Anna Bella Geiger. Executed between 1974 and 1977, the spiral-bound notebooks, which contain pencil and ink sketches as well as collages, examine the conditions that drove artistic production in Brazil at the time of their production, considering questions of cultural hegemonies and interdependencies, marginality and domination within space and language, and the role of perspective and perception therein. Featured titles include A Alimentação (1975), Admissão (1975), História do Brasil (1975–76), and Sobre a arte (1976).

All written documents and ephemera in this collection are in Portuguese.

“El Dibujazo” Collection

In the 1960s, young artists in Uruguay turned to the medium of drawing and experimented with neorealism and neo-Expressionism. Often known as “El Dibujazo,” this generation explored the changing sociopolitical cityscape of Montevideo and reflected on topics such as mass media and class struggles. This collection attests to the vibrancy of Montevideo’s gallery scene at that time and includes more than one hundred works on paper in graphite, ink, mixed media, watercolor, and posters by artists such as Eduardo Fornasari, Alberto Schunk, and Marta Restuccia.

All written documents and ephemera in this collection are in Spanish.

The Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA) supports the study and visibility of Latin American art.
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The Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA) supports the study and visibility of Latin American art.

Tue–Sat: 12–6 PM Sun–Mon: Closed
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