ELSEWHERE(S): OTHER WORLDS, OTHER TIMES, OTHER TERRITORIES
Another Space announces Elsewhere(s), an exploration of otherworldliness. Cocurated by Estrellita B. Brodsky and José Falconi, the exhibition brings together works by over 25 artists from Latin America and its diaspora, from the 9th Century BCE to the present. Grouped around themes of cosmology, magic, and non-Western forms of knowledge, Elsewhere(s) seeks to reflect on the traditional role of artists and their potential to envision alternative societies as utopian or reclaimed territories.

As the social theorist Henri de Saint-Simon proposed in his definition of the artist in the avant-garde of the 18th century: artists should be, first and foremost, in charge of envisioning new worlds and showing us where else we could go as a society and as individuals. Taking this utopian dimension as a point of departure, Elsewhere(s) explores the way artists have expanded the limits of our perceived reality, presenting us with alternative paths, newly imagined territories, or regions and practices that have remained hidden or dismissed by Western rationality. It is this peripherality and geographic indetermination that the exhibition’s title refers to.
Organized into three intertwined sections, Elsewhere(s) spans multiple generations and time periods. The first section, Uncharted Territories explores Latin America’s long tradition of unearthly cosmology presenting pre-Hispanic ‘stargazers’ from the Olmec and Mezcala cultures dating back to the 3rd and 9th Centuries BCE. Alongside these are a suite of works by Argentine utopian visionary Xul Solar, and a number of space-themed works by Erica Bohm, Adál Maldonado and Rubén Ortiz Torres. Together they blur the limits between the real and purely imagined of outer space. In a parallel approach, the works of Elda Cerrato and Juan Downey explore concepts of utopian architecture.
In the section, Contested Geographies, Miguel Angel Ríos reconfigures a 16th century map of the Americas to suggest the colonial dynamics of annexing or “discovering new territories.” The theme is directly addressed by artists Jesús Eduardo Correa-Nache, Julieth Morales, Santiago Yahuarcani and Adler Guerrier. Their works stand as carefully crafted responses to the systematic erasing of subaltern subjectivities.
A third section, entitled Entangled Histories, considers the textile medium as a metaphor for the ways in which artists across both hemispheres push the limits of our reality by intertwining fact and fiction, myth and reality. Artists Gego, Antonio Pichillá, Jorge Eduardo Eielson and Sandra Monterroso, adapt traditional and modernist practices to emphasize a non-linear narrative that illustrates how many Elsewhere(s) are always concomitant and therefore always possible.
Elsewhere(s): Other worlds, other times, other territories
Until May 27, 2022
Another Space
New York City, United States
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Miami Dade College’s (MDC) Cuban Legacy Gallery, in collaboration with the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora, presents Baruj Salinas: 1972–2022, a thematic survey of the acclaimed Miami-based Cuban American painter’s abstract work. Curated by Adriana Herrera, the show spans a half century of Salinas’ artistic career and features 40 works and includes paintings, works on paper, glazed ceramics, and an artist’s book. The works are borrowed from Miami collections, including that of the Cintas Foundation. The exhibition will be on view until August 14, 2022.
CUBAN LEGACY GALLERY PRESENTS BARUJ SALINAS: 1972–2022
Miami Dade College’s (MDC) Cuban Legacy Gallery, in collaboration with the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora, presents Baruj Salinas: 1972–2022, a thematic survey of the acclaimed Miami-based Cuban American painter’s abstract work. Curated by Adriana Herrera, the show spans a half century of Salinas’ artistic career and features 40 works and includes paintings, works on paper, glazed ceramics, and an artist’s book. The works are borrowed from Miami collections, including that of the Cintas Foundation. The exhibition will be on view until August 14, 2022.

Before machines took over, many issues were resolved following an algorithmic principle with some logic and a little math. The originator of the idea was a Persian mathematician in the eleventh century. Later, the procedure became essential for science, everyday life and art. Basically, the algorithmic methods are in the patterns of Islamic art (see tessellation notation), in the Andean chakana and quipus of the Inca period, in the Renaissance perspective and in other representational devices of the pre-digital era.
ART AND ALGORITHMS. BEFORE (AND AFTER) MACHINES TOOK OVER
Before machines took over, many issues were resolved following an algorithmic principle with some logic and a little math. The originator of the idea was a Persian mathematician in the eleventh century. Later, the procedure became essential for science, everyday life and art. Basically, the algorithmic methods are in the patterns of Islamic art (see tessellation notation), in the Andean chakana and quipus of the Inca period, in the Renaissance perspective and in other representational devices of the pre-digital era.

Through painting, Sandra Gamarra Heshiki (Lima, Peru, 1972) questions the representation mechanisms of the art system and the museum as an ideological device. He resorts to copying to make available certain cultural artifacts that have been extracted from their contexts within the framework of the modern-colonial regime. The artist adopts a syncretic gaze where pre-Columbian, colonial, modern and contemporary material productions come into friction.
EL ORDEN DE LOS FACTORES. SANDRA GAMARRA HESHIKI
Through painting, Sandra Gamarra Heshiki (Lima, Peru, 1972) questions the representation mechanisms of the art system and the museum as an ideological device. He resorts to copying to make available certain cultural artifacts that have been extracted from their contexts within the framework of the modern-colonial regime. The artist adopts a syncretic gaze where pre-Columbian, colonial, modern and contemporary material productions come into friction.