The Institute for Studies on Latin
American Art (ISLAA) supports the study
and visibility of Latin American art.
This initiative invites emerging scholars to undertake research within the ISLAA Archival Collections & Artist Files. Application deadline: May 16, 2025.
Maggie Borowitz analyzes how Anna Bella Geiger's use of transparency in her artist books reveals an early engagement with feminism in contemporary Brazilian art.
Jorge Lopera discusses Anna Bella Geiger's notebooks as forms of creative expansion characteristic of non-objetualisms in Latin America.
Agustín Díez Fischer examines bodily extension and mediated reconstruction in a choreographic work by Argentine conceptual artist Leopoldo Maler.
Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA) Library and Archives. Photo by Olympia Shannon.
ISLAA Writer in Residence Maggie Borowitz analyzes how Anna Bella Geiger's use of transparency in her artist books reveals an early engagement with feminism in contemporary Brazilian art.
ISLAA Writer in Residence Jorge Lopera discusses Anna Bella Geiger's notebooks as forms of creative expansion characteristic of non-objectualisms in Latin America.
Art historian Agustín Díez Fischer examines bodily extension and mediated reconstruction in a choreographic work by Argentine conceptual artist Leopoldo Maler.