The Institute for Studies on Latin
American Art (ISLAA) supports the study
and visibility of Latin American art.
Threads to the South considers fiber as a conceptual tool for exploring belonging, identity, and territory in Latin America
Writer and curator Mariana Fernández investigates the printmaking practice of the late Argentine artist Juan Carlos Romero, whose typographic posters iterated and expanded simple messages to the limits of their meaning.
Art historian Agustín Díez Fischer examines bodily extension and mediated reconstruction in a choreographic work by Argentine conceptual artist Leopoldo Maler.
Threads to the South considers fiber as a conceptual tool for exploring belonging, identity, and territory in Latin America.
Writer and curator Mariana Fernández investigates the printmaking practice of the late Argentine artist Juan Carlos Romero, whose typographic posters iterated and expanded simple messages to the limits of their meaning.
ISLAA Writer in Residence Benjamin Murphy analyzes the CAYC’s own institutional self-fashioning through its films productions, and reflects on the methodological and archival politics of studying these films today.
Art historian Agustín Díez Fischer examines bodily extension and mediated reconstruction in a choreographic work by Argentine conceptual artist Leopoldo Maler.