
Rethinking Conceptualism
By Katerina Valdivia Bruch
rethinkingconceptualism.com/
Collaborating institutions: Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut, Instituto Cervantes Berlin
Funded by: Hauptstadtkulturfonds, Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen
With the support of: Embassy of Uruguay in Germany, Embassy of Chile in Germany

Rethinking Conceptualism Mar 22, 2023

Katerina Valdivia Bruch "A Cultural Guerrilla Warfare? The Experimental Art Scene in Lima During Velasco Alvarado's Administration (1968-1975)"
"A Cultural Guerrilla Warfare? The Experimental Art Scene in Lima During Velasco Alvarado's Administration (1968-1975)" was presented by Katerina Valdivia Bruch during the conference Equal and Poor: A comparative perspective on Art in Communist Europe and the Global South in the long 1970s, held on 17-18 March 2023 at the cultural centre Zamek in Poznan.
The conference was organised by the Piotr Piotrowski Center for Research on East-Central European Art and was part of the Second East-Central European Art Forum. Special thanks to the organisers of this event, Katarzyna Cytlak and Magdalena Radomska.
More Information about the conference here >>>
Photo: © Francesco Mariotti "The Circular Movement of the Light"

Online Reading Session #6 Gloria Anzaldúa "Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza", introduced by Mayra Bottaro
In this session, Mayra Bottaro gave an introductory presentation of the book "Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza" by Gloria Anzaldúa, a publication that addresses topics such as Chicano culture, identity, race, gender and colonialism.
Abstract of the book:
Rooted in Gloria Anzaldúa's experience as a Chicana, a lesbian, an activist, and a writer, the essays and poems in this volume profoundly challenged, and continue to challenge, how we think about identity. "Borderlands/La Frontera" remaps our understanding of what a "border" is, presenting it not as a simple divide between here and there, us and them, but as a psychic, social, and cultural terrain that we inhabit, and that inhabits all of us. The book is divided into two parts. The first, "Crossing Borders", is written mostly in prose, and moves between memoir and critical theory, interspersed occasionally with poetry and quotations from other thinkers, poets, and singers. Anzaldúa also switches between Spanish and English, and between more casual and "academic" ways of writing. The second part, "Un Agitado Viento/Ehécatl, The Wind", is entirely poetry.
MAYRA BOTTARO received her PhD in Hispanic Languages and Literatures from UC Berkeley. She is assistant Professor at the University of Oregon and currently co-directs the Nineteenth Century Section of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA). Her book "Chronopolitics. New Media, Periodicity and Seriality in the Hispanic Atlantic, 1750-1880" (forthcoming in 2021) examines the links between material culture, media, and temporality and identifies a series of changes in the understanding of time and the notion of futurity, showing how the aesthetics of seriality became embedded within epistemological changes. She is currently working on her second monograph, "Scrambled Messages: Telegraphic Poetics and the New Atlantic Language", at the intersection of materialities of new media, theories of language, poetics and artistic experimental practices, and on a Digital Humanities project "Archivo Organizado y Centralizado de Rubén Darío" at Universidad Nacional Tres de Febrero (UNTREF), Argentina.
Introduction, moderation and audio editing: Katerina Valdivia Bruch
We would like to thank the participants for their questions and Mayra Bottaro for her inspiring introduction on Anzaldúa's book.
The online reading session took place on 29 October 2020.

Online Reading Session #5: Gerardo Mosquera "Art From Latin America (And Other Global Pulses)"
Online Reading Session #5: Gerardo Mosquera "Art From Latin America (And Other Global Pulses)"
In this session, we discussed with Gerardo Mosquera questions around the definition of Latin American art and the Latin American identity. In his essays, Mosquera revisits these categories and reflects on how Latin American art has been included in the global art circuits, and warns us about the dangers of using fixed categories that might lead to a self-exoticism.
Part of the discussion was dedicated to his newest publication "Arte desde América Latina (y otros pulsos globales)" (Art From Latin America (And Other Global Pulses)), an anthology of essays written from 1992-2017, edited by Cátedra (Madrid) in 2020.
GERARDO MOSQUERA is an independent curator, writer, art critic and historian based in Havana and Madrid. He is advisor to the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam, and member of the advisory board of several international art centres and journals. He was co-founder of the Havana Biennial, Curator at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, Artistic Director of PHotoSpain, Madrid, and has curated a number of biennials and international exhibitions around the world, most recently the 21st Paiz Art Biennial, Guatemala, and "Useless. Machines for Dreaming, Thinking and Seeing", Bronx Museum, New York. He recently co-curated the 3rd edition of "Today Documents" for the Today Art Museum in Beijing. Mosquera received the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1990 and is author of numerous publications on contemporary art and art theory. His latest book is "Arte desde América Latina (y otros pulsos globales)", published this year.
Introduction, moderation and audio editing: Katerina Valdivia Bruch
We would like to thank the participants for their questions and Gerardo Mosquera for being with us.
Note: The audio source was not the best and we were not able to change it. We hope you can enjoy the content despite some sound interferences.
The online reading session took place on 24 September 2020.

Online Reading Session #3 "Blueprint Circuits: Conceptual Art and Politics in Latin America". Special guest: Luis Camnitzer
In this session, we discussed two essays by Mari Carmen Ramírez: "Blueprint Circuits: Conceptual Art and Politics in Latin America" and "Tactics for Thriving on Adversity: Conceptualism in Latin America".
Our special guest was Uruguayan artist Luis Camnitzer, who commented Ramírez' texts, spoke about his own theory on Latin American conceptualism and reflected, amongst other topics, on art, pedagogy, the role of the museums, and art as a tool for social transformation.
LUIS CAMNITZER is a Uruguayan artist, who lives in the United States since 1964. He is a Professor Emeritus of Art at the State University of New York, College at Old Westbury. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship for printmaking in 1961 and for visual arts in 1982. In 2011, he was awarded the Frank Jewitt Mather Award of the College Art Association. In 2012, he received the Skowhegan Medal and the USA Ford Fellow award. He represented Uruguay at the Venice Biennial (1988), and was one of the participating artists during of the Whitney Biennale (2000) and documenta 11 (2002). In 2007, Camnitzer was appointed Pedagogical Curator of the 6thBienal de Mercosur. In 2018-19 the Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid did a retrospective exhibition of his oeuvre. His work is in the collections of over forty museums. He is the author of New Art of Cuba, University of Texas Press, 1994/2004; Arte y Enseñanza: La ética del poder, Casa de América, Madrid, 2000, Conceptualism in Latin American Art: Didactics of Liberation, University of Texas Press, 2007, On Art, Artists, Latin America and Other Utopias, University of Texas Press, 2010, and of the recently published anthology One Number Is Worth One Word, 2020.
Introduction, moderation and audio editing: Katerina Valdivia Bruch
We would like to thank the participants for their questions and Luis Camnitzer for being with us.
The online reading session took place on 30 July 2020.

Online Workshop "Curating Dematerialisation: The Archivo Juan Acha as Curatorial Object", with Joaquín Barriendos (full version)
The aim of the workshop is to discuss the forms of circulation and exhibition of documents/objects related to Latin American conceptualist art and non-objectual art of the 1960s and 1970s. For this, we will take as a starting point the exhibition "Juan Acha. Revolutionary Awakening", which was exhibited at the University Museum of Contemporary Art of Mexico (MUAC) in 2017. In addition to reviewing the category 'dematerialisation', we will consider the usefulness of other concepts such as 'artistic documentation' and 'site-specific document'. From these, we will talk about the division between work and document and reflect on what is at stake when we are preserving, rebuilding or exhibiting non-objectual art.
JOAQUÍN BARRIENDOS is Associate Professor at UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico). He writes on the intersection of Latin American art and modernist aesthetic cosmopolitanism. He is the author of various books, including "Archivos fuera de lugar" (2017), "Juan Acha. Revolutionary Awakening" (2017), "Art Geography and the Global Challenge of Critical Thinking" (2011), and "Geoestética y transculturalidad" (2007).
Introduction, moderation and audio editing: Katerina Valdivia Bruch
The workshop was held on 8 July 2020.

Online Workshop "Brazilian Art from 1960s to 1980s: An Aesthetics of the Margins", with Claudia Calirman
This workshop explores the period from the late 1960s through the 1980s, in which prominent Brazilian artists claimed that their work existed at the margins of society, both apart and alienated from the conservative social order, taking up the term "marginália" or marginality. To position oneself as a marginal was an active strategy, rather than a passive position. These artists proposed an alternative strategy to hegemonic artistic modes of production. They were influenced by the "Tropicália" movement, which merged the modern and the archaic, national elements and international trends. These novel practices transcended traditional mediums, eschewing the finished work of art in favour of actions, interventions and propositions.
CLAUDIA CALIRMAN is Associate Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, in the Department of Art and Music. Her areas of study are Latin American, modern, and contemporary art. She is the author of "Brazilian Art under Dictatorship: Antonio Manuel, Artur Barrio, and Cildo Meireles" (Duke University Press, 2012), which analyses the intersection of politics and the visual arts during the most repressive years of Brazil's military regime, from 1968 until 1975. The book received the 2013 Arvey Award by the Association for Latin American Art. Calirman is a 2013 recipient of the Arts Writers Grant from Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation and was the 2008-2009 Jorge Paulo Lemann Visiting Scholar at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University. She is a member of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA). Calirman has curated several exhibitions in New York, including "Berna Reale: While You Laugh" (Nara Roesler Gallery, NY, 2019); "Basta! Art and Violence in Latin America" (John Jay College, 2016); and "Antonio Manuel: I Want to Act, not Represent!" (Americas Society, 2011).
Introduction, moderation and audio editing: Katerina Valdivia Bruch
The workshop was held on 10 June 2020.

Online Reading Session #1: Luis Camnitzer "Conceptualism in Latin American Art: Didactics of Liberation"
In this online reading session, we discussed the introduction and the first two chapters of Luis Camnitzer’s book "Conceptualism in Latin American Art: Didactics of Liberation" (University of Texas Press, 2007).
Special thanks to the participants Sebastián Bustamante Brauning, Mayra Bottaro and Sebastián Eduardo for their contributions to the discussion.
Introduction, moderation and audio editing: Katerina Valdivia Bruch
The online reading session took place on 28 May 2020.