RechercherOpportunitésÉvénementsÀ proposHubs
C&
Magazines
Projets
Éducation
Communauté
Exposition

Vea con el ojo ciego (online)

En ligne1 Novembre 2020 - 31 Décembre 2020
Vea con el ojo ciego (online)

Vea con el ojo ciego (online)

Sila Chanto (1969-2015) was a Costa Rican artist and poet. Although working in dialogue with architecture, memory, language, history or landscape, the prime subject that Chanto returned to most insistently was the body, and its emotional and political boundaries – in an attempt to comprehend human nature and power relations in everyday life. For her, art became a means to prompt emotional, physical and mental forms of exchange. Her work explored the (im)possibility of cohabitation, the limits of communication, illness and death, female eroticism, bonds between animals and humans, amongst many other issues that interrogated extant social structures. This exhibition is the first curatorial overview of her work since her early passing in 2015. Instead of a retrospective approach, it seeks to bring together the multiple languages, media and rapports of scale that she assumed in her work.

Curation: Miguel A. López

http://teoretica.org/portfolio/vea-con-el-ojo-ciego-sila-chanto/

Plus d'articles de

Beyond Representation

Beyond Representation

Pérez Art Museum Miami
7 déc. 2023–31 déc. 2026
Diverse work uniforms displayed on stands in a bright room with large windows.

Dignidade e luta: Laudelina de Campos Mello

Instituto Moreira Salles
16 mai–22 nov. 2026
An art installation of white fabric ropes hangs within a bright atrium with a glass ceiling, some looping in the foreground, others vertical against a large window overlooking a city.

Cecilia Vicuña - The vanished glacier

Castello di Rivoli
30 avr.–20 sept. 2026
A man leans against large speakers next to a customized mobile record shack called "Swing A Ling," painted with music genres like Reggae and Soul.

Dancing the Revolution

Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
11 avr.–20 sept. 2026
Illustration of two naked people in a teal bathroom; one sits on the edge of a bubble bath holding a katana, while the other relaxes in the bubbles with a drink.

The Object of Power is Power

Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art
6 mai–20 sept. 2026