América Latina Magazine
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Fundação Bienal de São Paulo announces the curatorial team for its 37th edition

61st Venice Biennale: National Pavilions

61st Venice Biennale: Arsenale and Giardini

Iahra: Addressing Marine Ecology Through Industrial Materialities

The Convergence of African and Indian Lives in Kelly Sinnapah Mary’s Paintings

Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis

Transforming Memories of State Violence through Poetic Justice

Seed Archives: Celebrating African and Caribbean Design and Culture in London

Frestas – Art Triennial

Sugar Island: A Film that Lays Bare the Colonial Legacies between Haiti and the Dominican Republic

Representing the Desires of the Community in the Work of Jeff Cán Xicay

The Bahamas Pavilion returns to the 61st Venice Biennale after a thirteen year hiatus

Peruvian artist Antonio Paucar wins 11th edition of Artes Mundi Prize

Daniela Ortiz: Art as a Practice of International Solidarity

Three Artists Redefining the Human-Plant Relationship in Martinique and Guadeloupe

Histories of Ecology

C&AL’s Highlights of 2025 You Might Have Missed

2025 in Review

Yina Jiménez Suriel and Raphael Fonseca are the artistic directors for Iceland’s Sequences Biennial

MAM São Paulo announces Diane Lima as Curator of the 39th Panorama of Brazilian Art

Bodies in a state of eruption: the performance and metamorphosis of Malu Avelar

MACAS amplía su colección de arte afropuertorriqueño

The Artists Forging Ecological Ties in Female Fugivity and Marronage

Caribbean Sounds: The Connective Possibilities of Radio

Latin America is absent from the global debate on Afro-diasporic art, says Brazilian researcher Igor Simões, curator of the exhibition Dos Brasis. His argument draws on his own research as well as a survey of dozens of publications and exhibitions at North American institutions such as the Clark Art Institute and the Getty.

Macuxi Jaider Esbell: An Indigenous Life Cut Short by Epistemic Extractivism

Third Horizon curates a new Cinelogue program exploring decolonial cinema and liberatory imagination from the Caribbean

The Order of New Arts opens a new cultural space in the United States

Paris Noir: Pan-African Surrealism, Abstraction and Figuration

Comigo ninguém pode will be the exhibition that represents Brazil at the Biennale Arte 2026

Tadáskía Wins the 2025 K21 Global Art Award

Introducing the C& Cyclopedia

36th Bienal de São Paulo – Not All Travelers Walk Roads – Of Humanity as Practice. Part II

Irmandade Vilanismo: Bringing Poetry of the Periphery into the Bienal

Esperanza de León: Curating Through Community Knowledge

2nd Bienal das Amazônias

36th Bienal de São Paulo – Not All Travelers Walk Roads – Of Humanity as Practice

Eva de Souza: Textile Experimentation as Poetic Protest

A k u z u r u: Art, Post-humanism and Healing

Not for Sale: How Black and Indigenous artists are rewriting the rules of the art market

Denis Maksaens: Glitch and Representation in the Caribbean

I Am Monumental: The Power of African Roots

Flooded Memories

The Entanglement of Migration, Indigenous Peoples, and Colonialism

Roots: Beginning, Middle, and Beginning

Fundação Bienal de São Paulo announces list of participants for its 36th edition

The Spiritual Technologies of Jamaican Maroons

Electric Dub Station: The Return of Tomorrow

Flowing Affections: Laryssa Machada’s Sensitive Geographies

Andrea Chung: Dematerialization to Subvert Commodification

Veronica Ryan: Unruly Objects

The Forgotten Asian Histories of Latin America

Raíces y renacimiento: Mujeres Dominicanas en el Arte

Duality as an Invitation to Multiplicity

Cabo Verde’s Layered Temporalities Emerge in the Work of César Schofield Cardoso

What’s Behind Decolonial Movements in Brazil?

MASP inaugura novo edifício

MASF: An Art Museum that Connects Territory and Communities

LGBTQIA+ Diversity Stories

Biophillick: Connecting Ancestries Through Technology

Atlantic Threads

In their artistic practices Gladys Kalichini and Maritea Dæhlin explore memory, ancestry, and spirituality. While Kalichini examines erased Zambian women’s histories and water as a living archive, Daehlin blends her Norwegian-Cameroonian roots and sleep rituals to create vulnerable and transformative spaces of trust.

Ana Pi: Knowledge Does Not Disappear

Celebration and Resistance in Ventura Profana’s Films

MUNCAB inaugura novo espaço dedicado à arte afro-brasileira

It Comes from the Head: A Straw Heritage

C& x NAM Critical Writing Workshop, New Orleans

Imagining perversely with Madeline Jiménez Santil’s Art

HOA Gallery is redesigned as a non-profit initiative

A Call to History

C&AL’s Highlights of 2024 You Might Have Missed

An Afro-Indigenous Reawakening: The Year in Review

Prince Claus Impact Award Presented to Six Artists from Diverse Disciplines

Caribbean Musicality in the Work of Valerie Brathwaite

A Biennial that relates sound to space and bodies

Bring Home your C& Collectors Box!

38º Panorama da Arte Brasileira: Mil graus

Tessa Mars Links the Migratory Experience to Haitian Spirituality

Mercosul Biennial announces artists and spaces for its next edition

Puerto Caribe

The Art of Translating and Vice Versa

Navigating Scarcity, Race and Religion in Cuban Photography

Bienal das Amazônias anuncia curadora de sua segunda edição

Not All Travellers Walk Roads – Of Humanity as Practice

Anaïs Cheleux: Connecting Caribbean Identity Through Photography and Performance

Orgullo Nacional

In celebration of the 10th and 5th anniversaries of C& and C&AL, respectively, we visited Julianny’s studio, where the artist explores Caribbean identity through Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and feminine lenses. Using sculpture and painting, she reimagines artifacts and archives, fostering dialogues about memory, continuity, and resistance within the island’s art scene.

Afro-Indigenous Memory in the Work of Maria Lira Marques

THE SOUL STATION
Announcement of Second Women Photographers International Archive (WOPHA) Congress

C& Artists’ Edition #5 Zohra Opoku

Amanda Carneiro: Curation That Operates Outside Dominant Systems

MUNCH Award: Rosana Paulino

Poetry: Ruth Ige

Guido Llinás: the Incredible Story of an Afro-Cuban Artist in Paris




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