Combining sculpture, painting, performative acts, and installation, Guadalupe Maravilla (b. 1976) grounds his transdisciplinary practice in activism and healing. Engaging a wide variety of visual cultures, Maravilla’s work is autobiographical, referencing his unaccompanied, undocumented migration to the United States due to the Salvadoran Civil War. Across all media, Maravilla explores how the systemic abuse of immigrants physically manifests in the body, reflecting on his own battle with cancer. Maravilla received his BFA from the School of Visual Arts and his MFA from Hunter College in New York. His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, Spain; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA; Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, TX; and the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, among others. He has received numerous awards and fellowships including a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, 2019; Soros Fellowship: Art Migration and Public Space, 2019; MAP Fund Grant, 2019; Franklin Furnace Fund, 2018; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Fellowship, 2018; Art Matters Fellowship, 2017; Creative Capital Grant, 2016; Joan Mitchell Emerging Artist Grant, 2016; and The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation Award 2003. He has presented solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY; Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver, CO; Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Oslo, Norway; Socrates Sculpture Park, New York, NY; P·P·O·W, New York, NY; and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL, among others. His work has been included in recent group exhibitions such as uMoya: The Sacred Return of Lost Things, Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool, UK; soft and weak like water, 14th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju Metropolitan City, South Korea; Drum Listens to Heart, Part III, CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art, San Francisco, CA; Crip Time, Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt, Germany; and Stories of Resistance, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, among others. Guadalupe Maravilla: Mariposa Relámpago, a solo exhibition featuring a newly commissioned immersive installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston’s Watershed, was on view from May 25 - September 4, 2023. In a multi-year tour, Mariposa Relámpago will travel to venues across Texas beginning with Ballroom Marfa, November 3, 2023 - March 30, 2024; the Contemporary Austin, opening April 4, 2024; and The Blaffer Museum of Art opening November 2024. Maravilla held his second solo exhibition at P·P·O·W, Si no sanas hoy, sanarás mañana, in spring 2024. His first solo exhibition in the UK, Piedras de Fuego (Fire Stones), is currently on view at Talbot Rice Gallery.
Guadalupe Maravilla
b. 1976, El Salvador
Lives and works in Brooklyn, NY
Education
2013
MFA, Hunter College, New York, NY
2003
BFA, School of Visual Arts, New York, NY
Solo Exhibitions
2024
Piedras de Fuego (Fire Stones), Talbot Rice Gallery at University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Guadalupe Maravilla: Mariposa Relámpago, The Contemporary, Austin, TX
Si no sanas hoy, sanarás mañana, P·P·O·W, New York, NY
Armonía de la Esfera, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
2023
Guadalupe Maravilla: Mariposa Relámpago, Ballroom Marfa, Marfa, TX
La Alegría del Fuego, mor charpentier, Paris, France
Guadalupe Maravilla: Mariposa Relámpago, ICA Watershed, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA
2022
Guadalupe Maravilla: Purring Monsters with Mirrors on Their Backs, Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver, CO
Guadalupe Maravilla: Tierra Blanca Joven, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY
Sound Botánica, Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Oslo, Norway
2021
Luz y fuerza, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY
Planeta Abuelx, Socrates Sculpture Park, New York, NY
Seven Ancestral Stomachs, P·P·O·W, New York, NY
2019
Provocations, ICA, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA
Portals, ICA Miami, Miami, FL
Saga, Jack Barrett, New York, NY
2015
XOLO YAWNING, Y GALLERY, New York, NY
2011
Temple of the Bearded Man, DCKT Contemporary, New York, NY
Select Group Exhibitions
2024
Shifting Landscapes, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition, The Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY
Les voix des fleuves, Crossing the water, 17th Lyon Biennale, Lyon, France
For Dear Life: Art, Medicine, and Disability, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, San Diego, CA
To Mend the Heat, Yeh Art Gallery, Jamaica, NY
Broken Boxes, Albuquerque Museum, Albuquerque, NM
Decolonising Malta: Polyphony Is Us, Malta Biennale, Valletta, Malta
Wordplay, ICA Boston, Boston, MA
What Matters: A Proposition in Eight Rooms, San Francisco MoMA, San Francisco, CA
GUT_BRAIN 1: Destructive Desires and Other Destinies of Excess, Part Two, Blackwood Gallery, University of Toronto Mississauga, Mississauga, Canada
2023
Noor Riyadh Festival, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
12th Göteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art: forms of the surrounding futures, Gothenburg, Sweden
35th Bienal De São Paulo: choreographies of the impossible, São Paulo, Brazil
Songs for Ritual and Remembrance, Arthur Ross Gallery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
uMoya: The Sacred Return of Lost Things, Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool, UK
soft and weak like water, 14th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju Metropolitan City, South Korea
Boil, Toil & Trouble, curated by Zoe Lubov and Abby Pucker, Art in Common, Los Angeles, CA
Drum Listens to Heart, Part III, CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art, San Francisco, CA
2022
Introverse: Allegory Today, 80 Washington Square East, NYU Steinhardt, New York, NY
Ceremony (Burial of an Undead World), Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany
Contemporary Ex-Votos: Devotion Beyond Medium, curated by Emmanuel Ortega, University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque, NM; Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art at UNLV, Las Vegas, NV; Gallery 400, University of Illinois, Chicago, Chicago, IL
Fire Figure Fantasy: Selections from ICA Miami's Collection, ICA Miami, Miami, FL
Salutary Sculpture, Laumeier Sculpture Park, Saint Louis, MO
Native America: In Translation, curated by Wendy Red Star, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ; Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI; Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, TX; USF Contemporary Art Museum, Tampa, FL
2021
Sin Fronteras / No Borders, Espacio Mínimo, Madrid, Spain
Crip Time, Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt, Germany
Plus One, Luhring Augustine, New York, NY
Absence-Presence, ANOTHER SPACE, New York, NY
Cruising the Horizon, The Latinx Project, NYU, New York, NY
Stories of Resistance, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, St. Louis, MO
2020
States of Mind, Moody Center for the Arts, Rice University, Houston, TX
Borders of Freedom, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, CA
100 Drawings from Now, The Drawing Center, New York, NY
Displaced: Contemporary Artists Confront the Refugee Crisis, Site Santa Fe, NM
We Fight to Build a Free World, The Jewish Museum, New York, NY
Noplace, P·P·O·W, New York, NY
Hell is a Place in Earth. Heaven is a Place in Your Head, P.P.O.W, New York, NY (online)
All of Them Witches, Jeffrey Deitch, Los Angeles, CA
2019
Borders of Freedom, Locust Projects, Miami, FL
What’s Love Got to Do with It?, The Drawing Center, New York, NY
AXxoN N., Essex Flowers, New York, NY
Room for Failure, Piero Atchugarry Gallery, Garzón, Uruguay
Pacha, Llaqta, Wasichay: Indigenous Space, Modern Architecture, New Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
2018
In the rabbit hole, Mother Gallery, New York, NY
Running Towards the Sun, Jack Barrett, New York, NY
Mundos Alternos: Art and Science, California Museum of Photography, Riverside, CA
The Neighbors: Love Thy Neighbor, Bronx Museum, New York, NY
2017
UPROOT, Smack Mellon, Brooklyn, NY
Exquisite Corpse: Moving Image in Latin Art, Mana Contemporary, Jersey City, NJ
First We Take Manhattan, Ethan Cohen, New York, NY
2016
10, an exhibition celebrating MATRE Contemporary’s 10 year anniversary, Museo de Arte de El Salvador (MARTE), San Salvador, El Salvador
2014
El Museo’s Bienal: The (S) Files 2011, El Museo del Barrio, New York, NY
2011
Hair Tactics, Jersey City Museum, Jersey City, NJ
Select Performances and Projects
2024
Fusebox at Waterloo Park, Austin, TX
2021
Summer Solstice Festival with Healing Sound Bath, Socrates Sculpture Park, New York, NY
2019
Mundos Alternos: Art and Science Fiction in the Americas, Queens Museum, New York, NY
2018
OG of the Undocumented Children, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
2017
BOOM! BOOM! WHAMMM SWOOSH!, Texas State Capitol
Prophets, thieves, and lovers: A Performance by Guadalupe Maravilla, Rubin Foundation, New York, NY
Between Illegality and Personhood, The New Museum, New York, NY
2014
The Magus Performance, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
2011
Crossing Performance, United States-Mexico Border
Temple of the Bearded Man, DCKT Contemporary, New York, NY
Performa 11, The Dating Game, El Museo Del Barrio, New York, NY
2010
Performances, DCKT Contemporary, New York, NY
Select Public Collections
Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, TX
Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY
Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Des Moines Art Center, Des Moines, IA
Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA
Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Olso, Norway
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC
Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA
Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at Portland State University, Portland, OR
Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY
Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, San Diego, CA
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, Spain
National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
New Mexico State University Art Museum, Las Cruces, NM
Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL
Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY
Tate, London, UK
University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque, NM
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, MA
Bibliography
2024
Gilli, Alexandra, editor. “17e Biennale de Lyon Art contemporain: Les voix des fleuves Crossing the water.” PBtisk a.s., Czech Republic, 2024, pp. 139.
2023
Gilman, Claire, and Roger Malbert. “Guadalupe Maravilla.” Drawing in the Present Tense, Thames & Hudson, pp. 62-63.
2022
"Guadalupe Maravilla: Sound Botánica,” Høvikodden, Norway. Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, 2022.
Franke, Anselm, Elisa Giuliano, et al., editors. Ceremony (Burial of an Undead World), 1st ed., Spector Books, Leipzig, 2022, pp. 378-380.
2021
ICA Miami. “Guadalupe Maravilla: Portals,” Miami, FL: Institute of Contemporary Art Miami, 2021.
2020
Ahlbeg, Joanna. “100 Drawings from Now,” Drawing Papers 143.
Awards and Fellowships
Joan Mitchell Foundation Inaugural Fellow
Lise Wilhelmsen Art Award
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation & Ford Foundation Latinx Artist Fellowship
Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Fellowship
Creative Capital Grant
The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation Award
Two surveys of hometown artists — one at the Brooklyn Museum, another of those it snubbed — serve as a meditation on recognition and rejection.
Stories of healing and repair transform the gallery in a new exhibition which opens on Saturday.
Below we examine 75 of the most important and exciting Latinx artists, who have had a profound impact on art history and their communities by creating work in which community members can see themselves represented.
Their’s wasn’t a migration of better opportunity. They weren’t pursing the “American Dream,” whatever that is.
A new art biennale and an ambitious cultural center are part of a concerted effort to rewrite the island nation’s reputation.
Dating back to the late 18th century, retablos are small devotional paintings created to thank God or a saint for their protection during a particularly trying or dangerous event. In his show, Si no sanas hoy, sanarás mañana, Guadalupe Maravilla conjures this tradition as he nests narrative works inside spiny mixed-media sculptures that address the indelible impact of childhood trauma.
Entitled "Les voix des fleuves, Crossing the water", the 17th edition of the Lyon Biennale invites artists to interrogate and investigate the subject of the waxing and waning relationships of human beings with one another and with their environment.
On April 8, the sun and the moon will align for the first total eclipse over the Austin area in more than 600 years. Before then, starting on the morning of April 2, two works of art by acclaimed El Salvador-born, New York City-based Guadalupe Maravilla will align in Austin public spaces for a series of viewings and ceremonies.
Artist Guadalupe Maravilla joins curator Eugenie Tsai for a conversation.
In conjunction with Guadalupe Maravilla’s solo exhibition, Si no sanas hoy, sanarás mañana, P·P·O·W is pleased to present a series of meditations and sound ceremonies on March 6, 7, 8, and 12.
These contemporary Latinx artists have made vital contributions to the art world. From the thought-provoking textile and light installations of Gabriel Dawe to the explorations of power structures of Augustina Woodgate, and the re-examinations of ancient imagery of Claudia Peña Salinas, these eight artists have impacted how we see our communities, our culture, and the natural world.
The El Salvadorian artist muses on sound therapy, trauma, and his own migration journey to the U.S. in a new show at Ballroom Marfa.
Tara and Jack Benmeleh, Dennis Scholl, and Pilar Crespi Robert share how life in Miami shaped the development of their very different art collections.
The curator and philanthropist promotes the artists of the region through acquisition, writing and lectures
Chance the Rapper, artist María Magdalena Campos-Pons, and philanthropist Estrellita B. Brodsky are among those who will take the stage
Ranging from painting to installation and beyond, the latest additions to the museum's holdings include contemporary voices as well as legends like Nam June Paik and Robert Irwin
The Salvadoran artist has blended Indigenous traditions, sound therapy, and symbolism to create a transformative exhibition that is embarking on a tour across Texas.
From Doyle’s new gallery space in Charleston to Chris Wolston’s whimsical pieces installed at Hotel Bel-Air
New Additions Reflect SFMOMA’s Collecting Priorities, Including Works by Artists Connected to the Bay Area
Take the water shuttle over to the ICA’s Eastie outpost and explore the new Guadalupe Maravilla: Mariposa Relámpago exhibit. At its center is Mariposa Relámpago (Lightning Butterfly), a newly commissioned work for the ICA Watershed and the artist’s largest sculpture to date.
Born out of the artist’s traumatic experience immigrating as an unaccompanied minor and suffering from colon cancer as an adult, the ongoing body of work evinces the healing power of sound and vibration.
The artist’s traumatic journey from El Salvador to the US pervades his work, but his intention is repair.
The 14th Gwangju Biennale (until 9 July) takes as its tagline ‘soft and weak like water’ – a phrase inspired by the classical Chinese treatise Tao Te Ching in which Laozi proposed the paradoxical power of the soft and subtle to overcome seemingly insurmountable challenges.
At the 14th Gwangju Biennale's press conference, a local journalist probed artistic director Sook-Kyung Lee on the difference between this edition's themes and the one before it.
Plus, the National Portrait Gallery raises enough money to jointly buy a rare portrait with the Getty and a T-Rex will go on view in Antwerp.
The grant-giving foundation preserves Warhol's legacy through research, licensing and advancement of the visual arts.
As a recurring art event, the Gwangju Biennale carries a heavy burden: to deal with the legacy and trauma of the democratic uprising and the massacre that followed in the city in May 1980, a recent historical event that has not reached its closure.
With an installation on view at the 14th Gwangju Biennale and an exhibition at ICA Watershed opening in May 2023, the artist talks about creating space to heal through his art
On Thursday night in Gwangju, South Korea, as hundreds took their seats on a plaza for the opening ceremony of the city’s storied art biennial, dark clouds loomed overhead.
A highly subjective list of the concerts, festivals, exhibits, plays, and experiences you shouldn't miss this season.
At his upcoming show at ICA Watershed, Boston, the artist transports his audience using the power of sound baths.
Scheduled to run from 7 April to 9 July, the show’s organisers have revealed further exhibitions details as well as all the contributors.
In 2022, we witnessed a rise in neo-surrealist art, NFTs, and textile-based art practices. These were trends that were bubbling to the surface by the end of 2021, but weren’t fully realized until the spring of the following year. Now, many other styles are emerging as key genres that may have their moment this year.
United States Artists Fellowships were awarded today to 45 artists and cultural practitioners across the United States and its territories.
The Chicago-based arts nonprofit United States Artists (USA) named 45 recipients of this year’s fellowships, each of which comes with an unrestricted $50,000 cash award. The selected artists represent 19 states, Puerto Rico, and Guam, and a range of age groups and career stages.
Five artists discuss their plans for 2023, from drawing and painting to sound sculpture and performance art
Visitors will find a rich variety of works at museums, satellite fairs and art spaces.
The Artsy Vanguard, now in its fifth edition, is our annual feature spotlighting the most promising artists working today.
Inspired by water and witchery, Art in Common's first show will feature works by artists such as Marina Abramović and Guadalupe Maravilla.
Mindscape initiative is a programme of residencies and exhibitions in museums across the world that explore psychological wellbeing post-pandemic
Ahead of its opening next April, the 2023 Gwangju Biennale has named the initial 58 artists (of an estimated 80 total) that are set to exhibit their work as part of the exhibition, which is organized by Tate Modern senior curator Sook-Kyung Lee under the title of “soft and weak like water.”
Plus, PPOW is collecting goods for migrants in New York, and Dia Art Foundation staffers vote to form a union.
In the face of a humanitarian crisis caused by governor Abbott busing migrants to sanctuary cities, artists Guadalupe Maravilla and Mariana Parisca and P·P·O·W gallery are gathering supplies and donations
Guadalupe Maravilla’s New York museum show resolutely harnesses the otherness of illness, while never surrendering to the notion of suffering as a totalizing narrative.
More than two years after the start of the coronavirus shutdowns, the Bay Area’s visual art scene has not only rebounded from pandemic delays, but also has pushed forward with exciting new developments.
Maravilla turned to Tripa Chuca as a way to meet others during his migration to the U.S.
Guadalupe Maravilla’s Tierra Blanca Joven at the Brooklyn Museum consists of “Disease Throwers”—large sculptures that function as healing sound baths, a curation of Mayan artifacts from the museum’s collection, video performance, and a community healing room.
These university museum leaders are bridging cultural chasms through elaborate and generative work with their students.
From Genesis P-Orridge at Pioneer Works to Louise Bourgeois at the Met, our pick of the best exhibitions in the city this week
The artist, who fled the violence of the civil war in El Salvador as a child, incorporates ritual gongs into his sculptures, on view in the show “Tierra Blanca Joven,” at the Brooklyn Museum.
Guadalupe Maravilla's practice and resulting artworks centre mostly on healing as an individual and societal tool to overcome trauma, drawing from his background as a child of war and experiences as a cancer survivor to build spaces focused on communal care and healing across generations.
It was terrifying, but there was so much beauty and magic.
That's how the artist Guadalupe Maravilla describes much of his life. And it could also be said for his work — looming sculptures and haunting sound art — exhibitions of which are currently being shown at the Museum of Modern Art and the Brooklyn Museum in New York.
The Salvadoran artist talks to Aruna D’Souza about retracing his childhood migration through Central America and Mexico, collectively healing trauma and performing in the dark
New York Art Week, which runs May 5th through 12th, is the latest evolution in the city’s always mercurial art fair scene. In the past, major fairs have spawned numerous satellite events, and organizations across the city have tried to capitalize on the monied collectors who flock here for the marquee events. New York Art Week is a unique endeavor in that it’s the first attempt to bring together many of these actors under one banner with a focused mission.
In memory of Stephanie, and in honor of Alejandro.
A new exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum showcases the work of multidisciplinary artist Guadalupe Maravilla, the first contemporary Central American artist to have a solo show at the Museum.
El artista salvadoreño Guadalupe Maravilla ha convertido dos salas del museo Henie Onstad de Oslo en un manifiesto a favor de los poderes curativos del arte. Sound Botánica, su primera gran exposición individual en Europa, explora cómo la pintura o la instalación pueden enfrentarse a la enfermedad y el trauma, al tiempo que revisten el centro expositivo de un aura espiritual.
Guadalupe Maravilla’s sculptures at the Brooklyn Museum and MoMA explore the trauma caused by war, migration and family separation.
Plus, solo shows for Stan Squirewell, Rebecca Ward, Madjeen Isaac, and more.
Plus, check out the latest edition of our Artnet Talks and see works by Brazilian artist Amelia Toledo.
Bodies surged toward the front doors of LAGO, whose opening bash had just reached capacity. The crowd pleaded desperately to security guards for entry. Someone began pushing and faces flattened against glass. Everyone was on the list, but no one could get in. The more intrepid guests circled around the back of the pavilion, toward the dark, brackish lake. Security guards rushed to pull us off planters. Through the windows, a golden pendulum by Artur Lescher and a James Turrell window, radiating neon pink, seemed unperturbed by the invading horde—or, for that matter, the steady throb of Tulum house on the dance floor.
Guadalupe Maravilla’s “Planeta Abuelx” at Socrates Sculpture Park provided a welcome respite for pandemic times. Offering a space for meditation, healing, and recovery, the project reflected Maravilla’s engagement with mutual aid and therapy, focusing on the ways that art can sustain, restore, and provide solace. A cancer survivor and immigrant who escaped El Salvador’s bloody civil war, Maravilla understands the nature of trauma. These experiences, along with childhood memories, rituals, and traditional medicine, form the basis of his practice and its recuperative and communal purpose.
Participating institutions include the Brooklyn Museum, the Gropius Bau in Berlin, and the Museum of Art and Photography in Bengaluru, India.
These acquisitions may be a good barometer to track the success that Latinx art (used here to describe artists based in the United States, primarily but not limited to those born here or having arrived as children, with a heritage to Latin America and the Caribbean) is currently having within the art world. The fight for recognition has been ongoing since it was initiated in the late 1960s by artists, activists, and curators, and right now presents what some might call a moment for Latinx art.
As 2021 comes to a close, we’re taking the time to look back on the shows in the U.S. and around the world that we feel had the greatest impact. Like the year before, this year was again marked by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. But it had many more bright spots. Thanks to the vaccine, we saw the return of in-person shows, fairs, biennales, and events. Artists took the tumultuous times head-on, continuing to make work, sometimes addressing it directly, sometimes not. Curators took on subjects that ranged from themes like grief, connection, and even clay. There was joy, sadness, a celebration of humanity. Whether looking to the past, present, or future, we found ourselves once again communing with art, artists, and the thing that moves us most of all, beauty.
As the city reopened, the art world saw legacy-changing donations for the Met and the Brooklyn Museum, and a seismic shift in Tribeca’s gallery scene.
After a tumultuous 2020 that involved the beginnings of a pandemic and worldwide upheaval, the art world began to slowly go back to a form of normal in 2021. Along with that shift came a number of developments that brought art-making in new and unexpected developments. There was the rise of a new medium, and there was the return of performance art. There were artworks that spoke to a continued reckoning with systemic racism, and there were powerful pieces that offered forms of healing in a time when illness was prevalent. There was no shortage of creativity on display. The list below, featuring 15 works that defined this year, attests to that.
In August 2020, a Pew Research Center poll discovered that just three percent of the Hispanic population in the United States identifies as Latinx. The director of race and ethnicity research Mark Lopez explained that their rejection of the word had nothing to do with its inclusive framework, but rather its the limited means to describe the population as a whole. The outcome, he said, “reflects the diversity of the nation’s Hispanic population, and the Hispanic population of the U.S. thinks of itself in many different ways.”
At Socrates Sculpture Park, Guadalupe Maravilla transforms works of art into therapeutic instruments.
Who better to practice healing than the sick, who have likely experimented relentlessly, and who manage their own bodies every day? The El Salvador–born, New York–based artist Guadalupe Maravilla has channeled his experience with cancer and migration into a healing-focused practice.
In 1984, eight-year-old Guadalupe Maravilla left his family and joined a group of other children fleeing their homes in El Salvador. The Central American country was in the midst of a brutal civil war, a profoundly traumatic experience that’s left an indelible impact on the artist and one that guides his broad, multi-disciplinary practice to this day.
The picture frame has a long history of underappreciation. For centuries, collectors and museums treated frames as afterthoughts to the artworks they contained, swapping them out according to changing tastes or to match their immediate surroundings. The New York frame dealer Eli Wilner recounted that even in the 1980s, major galleries gave him their unwanted antique frames for free.
The new series Migrant Futures is aimed at pushing forward our thinking and action about immigration and borders.
Though it’s tempting to hole up inside to escape the summer heat, meaningful art makes a sunny jaunt worth the trip. Crafted with the intention to provoke thought and help us catch our collective breath, temporary art installations by Sam Durant, Melvin Edwards, Mimi Lien, Guadalupe Maravilla and Sam Moyer installed across Manhattan and Queens this season are both grounding and impactful.
The Ford Foundation and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will give 75 artists $50,000 each.
Three L.A. artists are among 15 people receiving $50,000 each as the inaugural winners of the newly established Latinx Artist Fellowship, a program administered by the U.S. Latinx Art Forum with support from the Andrew W. Mellon and Ford foundations.
Two of the country’s largest philanthropic organizations have joined forces for a new initiative that aims to bring visibility to Latinx art in the United States.
As part of a collaboration with Art21, hear news-making artists describe their inspirations in their own words.
These spaces nudge you toward unexpected art surprises and offer vistas of healing and history.
June is reopening month for New York City! With the weather warming up, the city has lots of outdoor art premiering in fun destinations to check out.
Healing, and self-care in general, is a major industry right now — at the beginning of 2021, the self care industry was valued at $450 billion. But Guadalupe Maravilla doesn’t believe that healing comes from downloading an app or paying a shaman $1,000 to cleanse your energy. Instead, he says, real healing comes from being kind to others, helping those in need and giving back to the community — not just once in a while, but every day. Healing, for Maravilla personally, expresses itself in art.
Fleeing civil war in his native El Salvador, Maravilla arrived in the U.S., in 1984, as an unaccompanied eight-year-old. Some thirty years later, the Brooklyn-based artist was diagnosed with and survived colon cancer. He channels both of these experiences in his impressive début at the P.P.O.W. gallery’s handsome new space, in Tribeca.
Good vibrations: the artist offers up his assemblages and sound baths.
With COVID-19 vaccinations ramping up and the official start of spring just around the corner, it seems a natural time to cautiously ease back into “normal” public life or something more closely resembling it. Longer days and fairer weather also, of course, means more time spent outside with sculpture gardens, open-air art spaces, and museum grounds offering an ideal bridge between indoor gallery-going and reconnecting with the great outdoors during a season of renewal and rebirth.
Shinichi Sawada’s ceramic creatures; Sophie Larrimore and Jerry the Marble Faun’s two-person show; and Guadalupe Maravilla’s devotional paintings.
Your list of must-see, fun, insightful, and very New York art events this month.
Maravilla was part of the first wave of unaccompanied, undocumented children to arrive at the United States border in the 1980s as a result of the Salvadoran Civil War. While Maravilla emigrated at the age of eight, he became a U.S. citizen at the age of 26. Yet it was not until his recovery from colon cancer in 2013 that he felt the urgency to speak out about the struggles so many undocumented immigrants and their families face.
As COVID-19 continues to proliferate throughout New York City, forcing all art institutions to remain closed to the public, museums and galleries have been scrambling to convert their programming to an online-only format. A standout example of this adaptation is P.P.O.W.’s current presentation, Hell is a Place on Earth. Heaven is a Place in Your Head.