Intervenxions Vol. 1
Now available in print, this inaugural volume features a collection of thirteen conversations with emerging and established Latinx artists and curators, edited by Néstor David Pastor and Alex Santana.
Intervenxions Vol. 2
The second print volume features 15 original essays on visual art, music, architecture, spatial politics, activism, and community-building,
Intervenxions Vol. 3
Intervenxions Vol. 3 features 12 original issues touching on topics of ephemera, truth, and flight.
Cruising the Horizon: New York
Accompanying the exhibition influenced by José Esteban Muñoz’ “Cruising Utopia,” this catalogue provides more context on the fourteen featured artists and over 40 artworks included.
William Camargo: Negotiated Frontiers
This limited edition print publication on the occasion of A.I.R William Camargo’s Negotiated Frontiers, expands upon Camargo’s Origins & Displacements, As Far As I Can Get, and All That I Can Carry series.
Mary Valverde: Encoded marks, unwinding paths
This limited edition print publication on the occasion of A.I.R Mary Valverde’s Encoded marks, unwinding paths, reflects on Valverde’s deep study of Andean Indigenous and African roots.
Latinx Politics - Resistance, Disruption, and Power
A 54-page dossier featuring essays by Latinx Politics Conference presenters and a keynote interview with Dr. Lisa García Bedolla.
Afro-Syncretic
Afro Syncretic presents the work of nine artists foregrounding the African roots of the Latinx Diaspora. Collectively, the works center the vibrancy of diasporic Blackness within Latinx culture urging viewers to confront dominant narratives of what it means to be Latinx.
PELEA
PELEA gathers work from artists grappling with the violence of hyper speculation and displacement unfolding throughout the city. Working through performance, photography, drawing, painting, and sculpture, these artists engage the lived experiences of spatial precarity from a range of perspectives.
Building Radical Soil
Building Radical Soil presents the works of nine artists whose work calls us to urgent issues that include extractive economies, environmental racism, and colonial settlement through the reevaluation of ancestral, intergenerational, and community knowledge.