Showing posts with label Mexican. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexican. Show all posts

24/08/24

Mexican Prints at the Vanguard @ The Met, NYC

Mexican Prints at the Vanguard 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
September 12, 2024 – January 5, 2025 

Gabriel Fernández Ledesma
Gabriel Fernández Ledesma
(Mexican, 1900–1983)
Poster advertising an exhibition of work by young Mexican artists held in the Retiro Park, Madrid (detail), 1929 
Woodcut, letterpress 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 
Gift of Gabriel Fernández Ledesma, 1930 (30.88.1)

Mexican Prints at the Vanguard at The Met Fifth Avenue, Galleries 691–93, explores the rich tradition of printmaking in Mexico—from the 18th century to the mid-20th century—through works drawn mainly from the Museum’s collection. Among the early works presented are those by Mexico’s best-known printmaker, José Guadalupe Posada, whose depictions of skeletons engaged in different activities helped establish a global identity for Mexican art. Following the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920), printmaking proved to be the ideal medium for artists wanting to address social and political concerns and voice resistance to the rise of fascism around the world. Artists also turned to printmaking to reproduce Mexican murals from the 1920s and to create exhibition posters, prints for the popular press, and portfolios celebrating Mexican dress and customs. 

Featuring over 130 works, including woodcuts, lithographs, and screen prints, by artists such as Posada, Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, Elizabeth Catlett, and Leopoldo Méndez, the exhibition explores how prints were central to artistic identity and practice in Mexico and highlights their effectiveness in addressing social and political issues, a role of the graphic arts that continues today. The bulk of The Met’s expansive collection came through the French-born artist Jean Charlot, whose association with the Museum began in the late 1920s. Charlot donated many of his own prints and works by other artists to The Met, and in the mid-1940s acted on behalf of the Museum to acquire prints in Mexico. 
“This remarkable exhibition evokes the continued resonance of the graphic arts in Mexico and illuminates treasures of The Met collection—many of which have never been exhibited before,” said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “Reflecting a vibrant tradition that is deeply imbued with political and social history, these works exemplify the extraordinary power of print as a medium and the importance of creative expression as response to specific cultural moments.”

Mark McDonald, Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints at The Met, said, “As a long-preferred medium for artists to challenge and support social and political issues, printmaking provides a rich visual record of Mexican history. This exhibition activates The Met’s unique ability to explore this visual history through its extensive holdings of Mexican prints in addition to highlighting a key moment in the Museum’s collecting practice.”
Among the exhibition’s featured works are prints that survive in unique impressions and have not been published, offering a singular glimpse into the breadth of printmaking in Mexico. These include a group of posters from the late 1920s that address public health, workers’ rights, and education. The collection demonstrates The Met’s early interest in Mexican art and culture at a time when there was growing international interest in the subject.

Mexican Prints at the Vanguard is presented in six chronologically organized sections across three galleries. It begins with an overview of the history of Mexican printmaking, emphasizing how prints were central to artistic and political expression in Mexico especially during the 20th century, and a description of how a large number of works came to be in The Met collection through the French-born artist Jean Charlot, who spent most of the 1920s in Mexico. 

The exhibition then explores early printmaking in Mexico starting in the mid-18th century, tracking its development through the end of the 19th century and demonstrating the range of purposes for which prints were used. The first prints created in Mexico in the mid-16th century were woodcuts and engravings for book illustration and devotional purposes; this continued until the mid-19th century, when lithography became the principal medium. In the second half of the 19th century, printed political caricature developed as a powerful tool to defend freedom of thought.

A section about artist José Guadalupe Posada and his contemporaries broadens the narrative of the growth of printmaking in the early 20th century and its many visual manifestations. Posada has often been described as the progenitor of printmaking in Mexico, with a career that spanned a period of tremendous social and political change. 

Next, the exhibition focuses on the Mexican Revolution as the defining event of modern Mexico that tremendously impacted society and artistic expression. The Revolution became the focus of social and political struggle that is most prominently reflected through prints, and interpretations of the Revolution continued to be refined and reinterpreted long after it ended. This section looks at the conflict from its origins and as memory, as well as how it became a reference point for social and political activism in Mexico that continues to this day.

In the post-Revolutionary period, prints became the essential medium for promoting artistic, social, and political values. Public art was key to a state-sponsored effort to establish a new cultural identity. Mural painting has received the most attention—mainly because it is an ambitious undertaking and because of the fame of the artists involved, such as Diego Rivera—but an equally remarkable revival of printmaking took place. Prints showcase Mexico’s political, social, and artistic depth. Woodcuts in particular represented new ideologies related to democracy, education, and the avant-garde. 

A section dedicated to the Taller de Gráfica Popular (Workshop of Popular Graphic Art), established in Mexico City in 1937, illuminates the workshop’s development into one of the important printmaking collectives of the 20th century, producing striking posters, flyers, and portfolios that address mainly social and political issues. 

The exhibition concludes with a look at printmaking in the 1940s and beyond, as the preoccupations of the artists associated with the Taller de Gráfica Popular slowly shifted to accommodate middle-class consumption. This section highlights materials including portfolios of limited-edition fine art prints that focus on Mexican dress and customs and children’s book illustrations to evoke the paths along which printmaking developed during the 1940s, often targeting an international market.

Printmaking continues to be widely practiced in Mexico. Inspired by earlier traditions and often referencing revolutionary heroes, symbols, and themes, new communities of artists continue to create remarkable posters and flyers for public display. 

Mexican Prints at the Vanguard is curated by Mark McDonald, Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints, The Met.

The Met Fifth Avenue
1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10028 

17/10/21

Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism @ Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach - From the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection

Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection 
Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach
October 23, 2021 - February 6, 2022

The Norton Museum of Art presents Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection. Featuring over 150 works, including paintings and works on paper collected by Jacques and Natasha Gelman alongside photographs and period clothing, the exhibition includes the largest group of works by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera ever on view at the institution. Presenting these artists’ creative pursuits in the broader context of the art created during the renaissance following the end of the Mexican Revolution in 1920, the exhibition also includes work by Manuel and Lola Álvarez Bravo, Miguel Covarrubias, Gunther Gerzso, María Izquierdo, Carlos Mérida, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Juan Soriano, and Rufino Tamayo. It explores these artists’ distinctive interpretations of modernism as expressed in themes of nature, home, and family in photographs and easel and large-scale mural paintings.

Jacques Gelman and his wife Natasha built strong relationships with leading figures of the artistic movement that had arisen after the Mexican Revolution. The Gelman Collection consists primarily of works the couple acquired from modernist friends in this period. Jacques Gelman was a film producer during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema in the mid-twentieth century and he and his wife’s close bonds with Mexico’s creative community are underscored by the numerous portraits of them made by friends featured in the exhibition.

Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera are among the most influential figures of Mexican art in this period, known for their creative synergy with each other along with their personal relationship. Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism emphasizes the connections between Kahlo, Rivera, and their contemporaries’ collective experimentation with modernism. Featuring 22 paintings and works on paper by Frida Kahlo and 18 paintings, works on paper, and aquatints by Diego Rivera, the exhibition addresses the artists’ private experience with each other and situates their work in the larger history of modernism in Mexico, a narrative enhanced with portraits and photographs of the couple by artist friends and peers. Sections of the exhibition address the resonance and exchange of influence evident in the two artists’ work, along with Frida Kahlo’s struggles with lifelong chronic pain induced by a childhood battle with polio, and a bus accident that shattered her pelvis and spine at 18 years old.

Tracing the influence of Mexicanidad, the belief that Mexicans could create an authentic modernism by exploring the country’s indigenous culture, the exhibition reveals the centrality of this idea to Kahlo’s iconography, manifested as a distinctive brand of magical realism colored by Mexican folk art. Even her adoption of traditional Tehuana clothing reflected Frida Kahlo’s desire to establish a connection with ancestral Mexico while expressing a cross-cultural identity that honored her heritage and status as a modern woman. A selection of period vintage dresses sourced in Mexico, which include colorful embroidered blouses and full skirts, is on view in the exhibition, enriching the presentation’s examination of her art in the context of her life and persona.
“This exhibition offers viewers the opportunity to see beloved works by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera in-person and experience the physical impact of their creative vision,” said Ellen E. Roberts, Harold and Anne Berkley Smith Curator of American Art. “The scope of Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism returns major works of Mexican Modernism to the context in which they were produced—in a collaborative artistic community seeking to make an authentically Mexican modern art by exploring and embracing shared roots and folkloric traditions. It will be especially exciting to have the exhibition on view at the Norton, since these works have such resonance with the masterpieces of American and European modernism in the museum’s collection.”
Notable works in the exhibition include:

• Juan Soriano, Girl with Still Life, 1939 – Juan Soriano first encountered Kahlo at the age of fifteen, not long after he moved to Mexico City from Guadalajara. His early works are often subtle and dream-like, utilizing a personal visual language that owes much to Kahlo’s own metaphorical narratives. In the late 1930s Soriano painted a number of images of children holding and contemplating objects, their meaning often mysterious. They evoke the unique ways in which children perceive objects and the world around them, often uninhibited by established ideas of utility or beauty.

• Nickolas Muray, Frida Kahlo on Bench #5, 1939 – This photograph was taken in the New York studio of the photographer Nickolas Muray, who photographed celebrities across the world for magazines like Vanity Fair and Vogue. Nickolas Muray and Frida Kahlo met in 1931 and embarked on a volatile romantic relationship that lasted nearly a decade. Nickolas Muray’s photographs of Frida Kahlo are among the most well-known images of her, capturing the artist’s confidence and poise in vivid color. Nickolas Muray was also a supporter of Frida Kahlo’s work, purchasing her painting What the Water Gave Me (1938) from her exhibition at the Julien Levy Gallery in 1938.

• Frida Kahlo, Self-Portrait with Monkeys, 1943 – Flora and fauna feature prominently in Frida Kahlo’s paintings, often representing larger themes within her work. In this painting Frida Kahlo is surrounded by four monkeys, which she was kept as pets in Coyoacán. Frequently described as surrogates for her maternal energies, the monkeys in this work may allude to Kahlo’s new role as a mentor as she began teaching at La Esmeralda, the Ministry of Public Education’s art school, the previous year. When her declining health stopped her from teaching, she invited students to meet at her home, forming a small group of four regulars who became known as “Los Fridos.”

• Diego Rivera, Calla Lily Vendor, 1943 – In murals, easel paintings, and watercolors made throughout his career, Diego Rivera represented the everyday lives of the indigenous peoples of Mexico. Among his most iconic subjects were calla lily sellers, the earliest of which he painted in 1925. In this version the jubilant bundle of calla lilies dominates the canvas, largely obscuring a figure behind them who appears to be adding more to the basket. The two women in the foreground wear traditional fringed shawls, the one on the left pulling a length of fabric around the basket that will be used to tie it to one of their backs.

• María Izquierdo, Bride from Papantla (Portrait of Rosalba Portes Gil), 1944 – This colorful portrait depicts a young bride from Papantla, a region in the state of Veracruz. Brides there traditionally wear a white covering over their back called a quexquémitl, as well as a long white veil and floral headdress. Maria Izquierdo’s interest in representing Mexico’s diverse clothing traditions in her work, as well as wearing them herself, mirrors Kahlo’s own practice. Both were part of a larger trend of wearing traditional costumes that became prevalent in the decades following the Mexican Revolution and was a means of paying homage to the country’s native cultures while also supporting the new emerging identity of the nation.

Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism is organized by the Vergel Foundation and MondoMostre in collaboration with the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura (INBAL). It is curated by the Vergel Foundation curator, Magda Carranza de Akle, and for the Norton by Ellen E. Roberts, Harold and Anne Berkley Smith Curator of American Art.

A companion exhibition titled Frida and Me, curated by Assistant Curator Rachel Gustafson, presents a selection of works that respond to and are inspired by Frida Kahlo’s works and practice.

NORTON MUSEUM OF ART
1450 South Dixie Highway, West Palm Beach, FL 33401
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28/02/21

Normal Exceptions: Contemporary Art in Mexico, Museo Jumex, Mexico City

Normal Exceptions: Contemporary Art in Mexico
Museo Jumex, Mexico City
March 27 - August 15, 2021

Museo Jumex presents Normal Exceptions: Contemporary Art in Mexico, a thematic survey of contemporary art in Mexico over the past 20 years. Drawing primarily from the Colección Jumex with additional works by invited artists and collaborators, the exhibition fills the entire museum with more than 60 works by artists based in Mexico, including those of international origin, and Mexican artists living and working abroad. The museum’s galleries are stripped down to their original design for the exhibition, allowing for the installation of large-scale, conceptual works and ample natural light throughout the galleries.

Curated by the museum’s curatorial team led by Chief Curator, Kit Hammonds, the exhibition’s title is inspired by a key term in micro-history–the study of history from the perspective of individuals and their encounters with authority, and proposes the idea of looking from a grassroots perspective upwards, rather than from the top down.

“For Normal Exceptions, we looked at the entire Colección Jumex as a starting point, to highlight the development of art in Mexico over the last two decades,” noted Kit Hammonds. “We also want to show these works in the larger context of Mexico’s multi-dimensional ecosystem of artistic practice, and to include collaborators as a way of creating conversations between the museum and its contemporaries.” Museo Jumex’s second and third floors feature a variety of works from the collection, many of which are shown for the first time in the museum, joined by a selection of works by invited artists.

Exhibited for the first time in the Americas, Stefan Brüggemann’s (Mexican, b. 1975) Conceptual Decoration Silver and Black Wallpaper (2008) spans approximately 100 meters of a second-floor gallery wall. Despite its large scale, the two-word text “conceptual decoration” running across its surface appears small, presenting a series of contrasts and ironies between the ideas of concept versus decoration, art and design, work and support, and language and architecture. The ambiguity this provokes is a theme explored throughout the exhibition.

On view for the first time since its acquisition in 2010, Jorge Méndez Blake’s (Mexican, b. 1974) El castillo [The Castle] (2007) is a 14-meter-long brick wall that runs over a single copy of Franz Kafka’s unfinished novel The Castle, distorting and disrupting the orderly rows of 3,000 bricks from which the work is constructed. The work touches on some of the key motifs explored in the exhibition, particularly the relationship of the individual to authority, as explored in Kafka’s novel and represented poetically by the artist in the interruption it makes to the structure above.

Chantal Peñalosa (Mexican, b. 1987) has been constructing an archive of art from projects realized by the iniciative inSite in public spaces in her native city of Tijuana. Having never seen the projects herself, her study and knowledge of them has played a formative role in her own practice. Creating clay models from her imagination and photographing the now empty locations where they were originally presented, Chantal Peñalosa aims to connect to these practices and to the places they temporarily transformed. This is the first presentation of the project in a museum after its showing in the artist’s independent space in Tijuana.

Throughout the run of the exhibition, the first-floor gallery features three different installations presented sequentially and curated in collaboration with an organization that has played a significant role in the formation of contemporary art in Mexico.

The first is co-organized with ZsONAMACO, Latin America’s largest art fair and a chief driver in bringing Mexican artists to the international art market. In collaboration with ZsONAMACO’s Artistic Director, Juan Canela, the installation centers on new work by the Mexico City-based duo Rometti Costales that delves into the intersection of modern and ancient histories, beliefs, and practices.

inSite—which began as a cross-border public arts program in San Diego and Tijuana, and more recently ran Casa Gallina in Mexico City, which engaged artists with various communities—collaborates with Museo Jumex on the second installation. In the last two years, under the curatorial direction of Andrea Torreblanca, inSite has been reflecting on its own artist legacy and its future through a themed journal putting forward critical and highly current issues impacting art and the public, inSite’s journal and archives become the basis for an installation in the first-floor gallery as well as a live performance that takes its archives as a script.

The third collaborative installation is with the independent art school SOMA, founded by artist Yoshua Okón in 2009, which has played a significant role in forging links between artists of different generations and in the development of a discourse that has become central to many emerging artists, through both their studio program and public events.

Normal Exceptions continues Museo Jumex’s year-long series of exhibitions highlighting works from the renowned Colección Jumex, one of the leading collections of Mexican art, and one of the most significant private collections of contemporary art in Latin America. Other artists in the exhibition include Iñaki Bonillas, Wendy Cabrera Rubio, Miguel Calderón y Yoshua Okón, Pia Camil, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Zhivago Duncan, Mario García Torres, Daniel Guzmán, Gabriel Kuri, Teresa Margolles, Damián Ontiveros Ramírez, Gabriel Orozco, Raúl Ortega Ayala, G. T. Pellizzi, Alejandra de la Puente, Santiago Sierra, Melanie Smith, Lake Verea and the collective Tercerunquinto.

Museo Jumex will continue to offer a suite of online programming titled “Museo en casa,” to ensure its content is made widely and easily accessible. “Museo en casa” includes free online courses with critical thinkers in Mexico, and additional content by video, images, and text. Additional details about accompanying online programming for Normal Exceptions will be posted regularly on the museum’s website.

MUSEO JUMEX
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra 303, Colonia Granada, 11520, Mexico City
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15/11/09

Mexican Modern Painting Exhibition at Singapore Art Museum - Camino a la Modernidad - The Path to Modernity: Mexican Modern Painting

Frida Kahlo, Self-Portrait with Medallion, 1948
Mexican Modern Art Exhibition
Camino a la Modernidad

The Path to Modernity:
Mexican Modern Painting

Singapore Art Museum

15 November 2009 -3 January 2010
 
Frida Kahlo (1907-1954), Self-Portrait with Medallion, 1948
Oil on masonite, 50 x 40 cm - Private Collection
Courtesy of the Singapore Art Museum

The Singapore Art Museum and the Embassy of Mexico presents Camino a la Modernidad, The Path to Modernity: Mexican Modern Painting.   The exhibition examines the myriad artistic languages that constitute the formation of Mexican modernism. Camino a la Modernidad, The Path to Modernity: Mexican Modern Painting  is the largest Mexican art exhibition ever held in Singapore and Southeast Asia.

The exhibition was opened by the Spouse of the President of Mexico, Mdm. Margarita Zavala on Saturday, 14 November, at the Glass Hall, Singapore Art Museum. 

Camino a la Modernidad, The Path to Modernity: Mexican Modern Painting  traces major developments in  Mexican art from the 1900s to the 1950s, where Mexican society underwent tremendous changes in social and political spheres that impacted much of its artistic expression. The Mexican Revolution (1910) laid the foundation for a new artistic movement, Mexican Mural Renaissance, which attempted to bridge the class divide in the construction of a national identity and aesthetic, through bringing art to the masses in the form of highly accessible, outdoor public art murals. The exhibition features over 70 works  from important Mexican public and private collections, including works by renowned mural artists Diego Rivera (1886-1957), David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974), José Clemente Orozco, Roberto Montenegro, Rufino Tamayo (1899-1991), Maria Izquierdo (1902-1955) and Frida Kahlo (1907-1954).

The exhibition is organised  in three sections: Agents of Change, Charting New Territories and The Graphic Arts.

Agents of Change highlight the aspect of artists being   conscious of their roles as agents of social change, and many of them were aware of the need for art to be socially-conscious. 

The second section Charting New Territories shows how the artists attempt to break new ground in their art.  We can see this in the exaltation of Mexican landscape as a hallmark of national identity, the development of industrial scenes as a new genre of Mexican landscape painting, as well as the exploration of abstract art by artists such as Germán Cueto, Carlos Mérida and Kishio Murata, as a means of crossing the boundaries of aesthetic definition.

The Graphic Arts section presents the artists‟ belief  in  the  idea of art as a communicative tool  to the masses, and many of the illustrations here attempt to highlight the issues of the working classes and farming communities.
Says Director, Singapore Art Museum, Tan Boon Hui,  “Camino a la Modernidad, The Path to Modernity: Mexican Modern Painting  is the largest Mexican Art Exhibition ever to be showcased in Singapore and Southeast Asia.  The exhibition examines the myriad artistic languages that constitute the formation of Mexican modernism.  Through the selection of the artworks in this exhibition, we see how different artists interpreted the notions of „modernity‟ and „progress‟, and quite significantly,  their mixed results.  The Singapore Art Museum is privileged to work with the National Institute of Fine Arts in Mexico and the Embassy of Mexico in realising this magnificent exhibition.”                      
Says Mr. Antonio Villegas, Ambassador-Designated of Mexico, Embassy of Mexico, “In 2010, Mexico will be celebrating the 200th Anniversary of its Independence and 100th Anniversary of the Mexican revolution, Camino a la Modernidad: The Path to Modernity: Mexican Modern Painting. This is an exhibition that portraits the long history of Mexico and the vastness of the Mexican culture and art. We, at the Mexican Embassy in Singapore are very proud to share this heritage with the people of Singapore.  This is the first time that such a magnificent collection of Mexican art, 25 of the artworks are National and Cultural Heritage and it is inaugurated during the official visit of the President of Mexico., H.E. Mr. Felipe Calderon to Singapore. Mdm. Margarita Zavala, Mexico‟s First Lady will be the Guest of Honour during the opening on Saturday, November 14th, 2009. The Embassy of Mexico hopes that this Exhibition could serve as an invitation to our friends in Singapore to visit Mexico to learn and experience our uniqe culture.”  
Curator Michelle Ho’s Tour: The Art of Mexico


Travel back in time to a tumultuous era in Mexico‟s history  and see the evolution in painting styles and themes from the 1900s to the 1950s. How did the artists respond to the Mexican Revolution in 1910 and what role did the Mexican Mural Renaissance play in the creation of a national identity?

Venue  SAM Lobby
Fees Free. Registration Required

Singapore Art Museum
71 Bras Basah Road, Singapore 189555

Monday to Sunday: 10am to 7pm, with extended hours and  
FREE Admission on Friday from 6pm to 9pm

04/03/05

Betsabeé Romero, Galeria Ramis Barquet, NYC - Vulnerable Windows

Betsabeé Romero: Vulnerable Windows 
Galeria Ramis Barquet, New York 
March 4 - April 2, 2005 

Galeria Ramis Barquet is pleased to announce Vulnerable Windows, an exhibition of the most recent work of Mexican artist, Betsabeé Romero.

Throughout her career Betsabeé Romero has dwelt on traditional genres and handcrafting techniques to comment on aspects of contemporary Western culture, from the standpoint of her Mexican identity. For almost a decade, the automobile has been a recurrent theme in her paintings, sculpture, photography and site-specific installations. From toy cars transfigured into quasi Dadaist objects, “ex-voto” paintings on car parts like hoods and doors, to actual reconfiguration of automobiles as public sculptures, With poetic wit and ingenuity, Betsabeé Romero has transformed these artifacts into commentaries on the conjunction of technology and craft and the recycling of form and function.

For Vulnerable Windows, utilizing pre-Columbian geometric patterns and motifs, the artist pierced a series of eight used tires taken from the public buses of Mexico City. The tires are covered in gold leaf that also suggests a strong Baroque influence. Two other tires are carved with patterns of Indian iconography inspired by a recent visit to the Taj Mahal. Here, instead of recurring to the use of semiprecious stones, the artist uses chewing gum, an emblematic element of American culture, to fill the carved motifs on the tires.

Some other works from the exhibition, which are also a common example of Betsabeé Romero’s oeuvre, are comprised by found car windows, which she regards as lenses that protect us from urban violence. The windows are carved and grinded with different depictions alluding to this symbolism as protectors from the outside world.

Betsabeé Romero was born in Mexico City in 1963. She has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and Latin America. Romero recently participated at a group exhibition of Mexican artists titled ECO: Mexican Contemporary Art at the Museo Nacional de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid, Spain (2005). Recently, she has also participated in biennials such as the Havana Biennial and the Sao Paulo Biennial. She currently lives and works in Mexico City.

GALERIA RAMIS BARQUET
532 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011
www.ramisbarquet.com