Candice Lin

GREEN SNAKE: WOMEN-CENTERED ECOLOGIES

“Green Snake: Women-centered ecologies” focuses on the connections between art and larger themes of ecology in the context of rising temperatures and extreme weather events. Gathering more than 30 artists and collectives from 20 countries, the exhibition presents over 60 works that draw on mythologies and worldviews with women at their heart to explore possibilities for alternative ecological relationships and to imagine other futures.

,

LA HISTORIA DE UN MERCADER

Al examinar las historias entrelazadas de los obreros y la violencia colonial en Asia, el Caribe y las Américas a través de las trayectorias de vida de los comerciantes chinos, la exposición ilumina las experiencias compartidas de la diáspora china en distintas regiones.

Héctor Zamora, ‘Movimientos Emisores de Existencia (Existence-emitting Movements)’, 2019-2020. Performative action with women and terracotta vessels, Courtesy of the artist and Labor. Photo: Randhir Singh
,

Seismic Movements.dhaka Art Summit 2020

Convening a critical mass of artists, thinkers and participants, the Dhaka Art Summit 2020 reconsiders (art) histories, movement, borders and fault lines. Its fifth edition, Seismic Movements, takes place February 7-15 at the Shilpakala Academy in Dhaka, Bangladesh, expanding its geographic and temporal scope and looking at movements generated from energy released from pressure -geologically, socially, politically, climatically. Thus, the Summit is not just an exhibition, it is a movement. And is neither a biennale. Although it takes place every two years, this format is simply for organisational and logistical purposes.

,

Un Recorrido por Algunas Obras de la Bienal Made in L.a 2018

El Hammer Museum presenta hasta el 2 de septiembre de 2018 la cuarta edición de Made in L.A., la bienal de la institución que destaca las prácticas de artistas emergentes que trabajan en el área de Los Ángeles, Estados Unidos. Organizada por la curadora senior del Hammer, Anne Ellegood, y la curadora asistente del museo, Erin Christovale, la exhibición reúne a 32 artistas seleccionados a partir de 200 visitas de estudio, entre ellos Carmen Argote (Guadalajara, México, 1981), Carolina Caycedo (Londres/Colombia, 1978), Beatriz Cortez (San Salvador, El Salvador, 1970), Candice Lin (Concord, MA, 1979), Luchita Hurtado (Caracas, Venezuela, 1920) y Daniel Joseph Martinez (Los Ángeles, 1957).