Minia Biabiany (Guadeloupe |1988)

The work of Minia Biabiany builds on starting from an observation of the place from historical and phenomenological perspectives. Her work has reflected on the Caribbean imaginary in its political and poetic dimension related to the body and learning. Using language and natural materials as the basis of her work, Biabiany is investigating the legacies of the colonial past in our ways of knowing each other and thinking about each other.

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Marilyn Boror Bor (Guatemala |1984)

Marilyn Elany Boror Bor is a Maya-Kaqchiquel artist, independent curator, and art professor. She received a degree in art from the Universidad San Carlos in Guatemala. She is recognized for working with different materials and being committed to her social-artistic practice. She has participated in various residences and art presentations in Central America, the United States, Mexico, Chile, Germany, and Spain. She lives and works from Guatemala. 

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Duen Sacchi (Argentina | 1948)

Argentine trans* (Guaxu) artist, researcher, and writer. His work addresses the relationships between the formal practices of writing, drawing, engraving, and sculpture and their forms of reproduction from an anti-colonial, anti-racist, and anti-patriarchal perspective.

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Juana Valdés (Cuba | 1965)

Born in Cuba, she lives and works between Miami, FL., and Amherst, MA, where she teaches at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Valdés received her BFA at Parsons School of Design (1991) and MFA from the School of Visual Arts (1993). She is also an alumnus of the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture (1995).

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