Recent arts coverage:
- Evolutionary biology. Aesthetic determinism. Live action role playing. The Rude Mechs are making a new play again
- Suburban battlefield: Women fight invisible foe in Amie Siegel’s ‘Black Moon’
- In eerie paintings by Ana Fernandez, a house isn’t just a house
More arts coverage | Follow this blog on Twitter @artsinaustin | Read recent arts reviews
Austin360 blogs > Austin Arts: Seeing Things > Archives > 2009 > January > 13 > Entry
Blanton, UT Dept. of Art launch residencies for Latin American artists
The Blanton Museum of Art in collaboration with UT’s Creative Research Laboratory of the Department of Art and Art History has announced an ambitious new series of artist residencies for emerging Latin American artists.
Called “Mapping Exchange: Artists Residencies Programs,” the initiative establishes a series of three annual artists residencies that will include exhibitions, artist talks and cultural events organized with other university departments.
Spearheaded by Ursula Davila-Villa, the Blanton’s interim curator of Latin American Art, and CRL director Jade Walker — both ambitious emerging arts professionals in their own right — “Mapping Exchange” draws from Brazil, Argentina and Mexico.
Austin-Argentina Residency
This residency culminates with an exhibition of works by the visiting artist and selected university-affiliated artists.
Titled “A Strange Land,” this year’s exhibition will investigate citizenship, urbanization and borders and features the work of Erica Bohm, this year’s Austin-Argentinian residency artist. Her work deals with landscape and the different ways in which emotions are conveyed through the idea of landscape.
“A Strange Land” runs Jan. 24 through Feb. 7 at the Creative Research Laboratory, 2832 East Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Admission is free. Gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays.
Mexico-Austin Artistic Exchange
A partnership with the Museo Carrillo Gill in Mexico City, the Mexico-Austin Artistic Exchange provides a one-month residency at UT for a selected emerging artist living in Mexico followed followed by a similar presentation hosted by the Museo Carrillo.
This year’s artist is Diego Perez García, who started his career as a photojournalist. In his work, García reconstructs myths and legends through a Mexican sociocultural context.
Ibere Camargo Residency
Organized in conjunction with the Ibere Camargo Foundation (Porto Alegre, Brazil), provides an opportunity for a selected emerging artist (who must be living in Brazil) to spend two months at UT and the Blanton. An international jury selects the artist
Permalink | Comments (0) | Post your comment Categories: Blanton Museum of Art, Visual arts





Comments
When commenting, we ask that you keep things civil and abide by our Visitor Agreement. To report comment abuse, click here.