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  • Solo Exhibition: Juan Bautista Climent-Palmer

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Juan Bautista Climent first Solo Show in NYC
    The exhibition contains oil painting, watercolors, and sculptural installation with traditional papier Maché Mexican technique.

    Exhibition closes October 7th, 2017

    Juan Bautista is a Mexican artist from Xochimilco, Mexico City, a place with a millennial history that has influenced his work with a particular convergence of Christian and indigenous symbols.

  • Solo Exhibition: Juan Bautista Climent-Palmer

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Juan Bautista Climent first Solo Show in NYC
    The exhibition contains oil painting, watercolors, and sculptural installation with traditional papier Maché Mexican technique.

    Exhibition closes October 7th, 2017

    Juan Bautista is a Mexican artist from Xochimilco, Mexico City, a place with a millennial history that has influenced his work with a particular convergence of Christian and indigenous symbols.

  • Solo Exhibition: Juan Bautista Climent-Palmer

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Juan Bautista Climent first Solo Show in NYC
    The exhibition contains oil painting, watercolors, and sculptural installation with traditional papier Maché Mexican technique.

    Exhibition closes October 7th, 2017

    Juan Bautista is a Mexican artist from Xochimilco, Mexico City, a place with a millennial history that has influenced his work with a particular convergence of Christian and indigenous symbols.

  • Solo Exhibition: Juan Bautista Climent-Palmer

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Juan Bautista Climent first Solo Show in NYC
    The exhibition contains oil painting, watercolors, and sculptural installation with traditional papier Maché Mexican technique.

    Exhibition closes October 7th, 2017

    Juan Bautista is a Mexican artist from Xochimilco, Mexico City, a place with a millennial history that has influenced his work with a particular convergence of Christian and indigenous symbols.

  • Solo Exhibition: Juan Bautista Climent-Palmer

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Juan Bautista Climent first Solo Show in NYC
    The exhibition contains oil painting, watercolors, and sculptural installation with traditional papier Maché Mexican technique.

    Exhibition closes October 7th, 2017

    Juan Bautista is a Mexican artist from Xochimilco, Mexico City, a place with a millennial history that has influenced his work with a particular convergence of Christian and indigenous symbols.

  • Fantasy Island: Opening Reception

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    For Shey Rivera Ríos and Huáscar Robles, Hurricane María is an atmospheric manifestation compounded by the fiscal crisis troubling Puerto Rico’s urban landscape. The installation and performance Fantasy Island is an experience that explores how tourism and consumer culture sell a "fantastical" luxury lifestyle, a tropical paradise twisting crisis into “opportunity".

  • Exhibition Closing: Juan Bautista Climent-Palmer

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Juan Bautista Climent first Solo Show in NYC
    The exhibition contains oil painting, watercolors, and sculptural installation with traditional papier Maché Mexican technique.

    Exhibition closes October 7th, 2017

    Juan Bautista is a Mexican artist from Xochimilco, Mexico City, a place with a millennial history that has influenced his work with a particular convergence of Christian and indigenous symbols.

  • Fantasy Island: Exhibition Open

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    For Fantasy Island, Rivera transformed Loisaida’s space into a real estate office surrounded by a black and white grid that envelops visitors while monitors flash GIFs that borrow aesthetics from the vaporwave movement. In one image, a hand waves a wad of cash to a “Puerto Rico” neon sign while icons of the Virgin Mary and a ram, both cultural symbols of Puerto Rico’s syncretism and colonial history, spin in an enticing, dizzying spell. Viewers are also inspired to reflect on how natural disasters such as the path of hurricanes affecting not only Puerto Rico but also our Caribbean neighbors maybe twisted into “opportunity” after the crisis subsides.

  • Fantasy Island: Panel Discussion

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    Puerto Rico’s economic spiral has spread uncertainty on the island. A 120 billion debt in bonds and pension responsibilities has been deemed un-payable while a U.S. Fiscal Supervision Board suggests further austerity measures. About 170 schools have closed and a third of the island’s real estate is unoccupied. Puerto Ricans keep fleeing en masse while foreigners move in, altering the urban and cultural landscape.

  • Fantasy Island: Performances

    The Loisaida Inc. Center 710 East 9th Street, New York, NY, United States

    For Shey Rivera Ríos and Huáscar Robles, Hurricane María is an atmospheric manifestation compounded by the fiscal crisis troubling Puerto Rico’s urban landscape. The installation and performance Fantasy Island is an experience that explores how tourism and consumer culture sell a "fantastical" luxury lifestyle, a tropical paradise twisting crisis into “opportunity".