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Latinx Artists

Latinx artists have been taking center stage at international art fairs and museums, catalyzing conversations about their place in the history of American art and exploring notions of identity, language, immigration, queerness, religion and place. Discover the subversive work of Latinx artists in Southern California.

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Gabriela Ruiz on the rooftop of her current working studio in Mexico City | Samanta Helou Hernandez
With no formal art school training, multimedia artist Gabriela Ruiz is creating her own opportunities to forge a path in a famously stratified field.
Paz Errázuriz (Chilean, b. 1944), La Palmera (The palm tree), from the series La manzana de Adán (Adam’s Apple), 1987. Gelatin silver print. | Courtesy of the artist and Galeria AFA, Santiago. Artwork © the artist. Radical Women Hammer PST LALA
Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA is a long-overdue tribute to artists who are not just from Latin America, but who also identify as female.
"Wherever You May Go" by Tlacolulokos | Fausto Nahum PST LA/LA
Eight new outsized paintings in Los Angeles's Central Library celebrate the culture of Oaxacans in Los Angeles.
Nuestra Señora de Las Iguanas, Juchitán, Oaxaca, 1979 (Our Lady of the Iguanas, Juchitán, Oaxaca) by © Graciela Iturbide and Pages of PhotoGRAPHIC | © J. Paul Getty Trust. Text: © Isabel Quintero. Illustrations: © Zeke Peña PST LA/LA
At 75 years old, Graciela Iturbide refuses to slow down. In the coming months two exhibitions in Southern California will feature her iconic work, plus her own biography will take on graphic novel form and published by the Getty.
Laura Molina at "Artists Assemble" at MOLAA
Exhibition “Artists Assemble!” highlights a new generation of comic book artists who weren’t satisfied with the narrow conception of heroes and heroines in the mainstream.
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