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The Second Print Issue of C&AL

The Second Print Issue of C&AL

Fresh from the press! The new C& América Latina Print issue is out now - and on its way to Art Basel Miami.

This second Contemporary And América Latina (C&AL) Print issue reflects on little discussed biographies and practices such as the Afro-Mexican modern painter José Antonio Gómez Rosas. It also features projectsrom Martinican and Brazilian perspectives and talks to Barbadian artist Alberta Whittle.

The aim of C&AL is to reflect the artistic production and debates around Latin America, the Caribbean in relation to Africa. This means that we are constantly considering the many different and complex artistic perspectives.

By Heriberto Paredes

By Heriberto Paredes

By Miriane Peregrino

By Miriane Peregrino

Interview with Alberta Whittle, by Raquel Villar-Pérez

Interview with Alberta Whittle, by Raquel Villar-Pérez

By Will Furtado

By Will Furtado

By Aldeide Delgado

By Aldeide Delgado

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Feature

A person with dark lines on their body squats on a stone block, holding another stone block with red carved text above their head.

Manuel Tzoc: Art as Embodied and Relational Poetry

Folk art painting of two children watering a flowering tree with prominent red roots, above a handwritten caption about anticolonial resistance.

Daniela Ortiz: Art as a Practice of International Solidarity

Peru

Colonialism

A painting of a dark-haired woman whose skin is covered in green leaves and vines, wearing a dark blue dress, against a lush green landscape. In the sky, a dark figure with a tail and fiery feet flies while carrying a smaller figure.

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

Ecologies

Caribbean

Read more from

Feature

A person with dark lines on their body squats on a stone block, holding another stone block with red carved text above their head.

Manuel Tzoc: Art as Embodied and Relational Poetry

Folk art painting of two children watering a flowering tree with prominent red roots, above a handwritten caption about anticolonial resistance.

Daniela Ortiz: Art as a Practice of International Solidarity

Peru

Colonialism

A painting of a dark-haired woman whose skin is covered in green leaves and vines, wearing a dark blue dress, against a lush green landscape. In the sky, a dark figure with a tail and fiery feet flies while carrying a smaller figure.

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

Ecologies

Caribbean