Bárbara Sánchez-Kane in the past five years has established herself as an important, original voice in contemporary art. He participated in the 60th international art exhibition, La biennale di Veneza, Stranieri Ovunque, with the video and sculptural installation Prêt-À-Patria (2024). His works resists the traditional notions of mexicanidad and its relationship with the feminine and masculine. Whether through fashion, performance, painting or installation, all of her works present the anxieties and fears of daily life to question pleasure and domination within a hegemonic masculine society.
Sofía Alazraki is a photographer and set designer working across art, fashion, and film. Formed as an art historian, her practice focuses on still life photography and installation, where she builds carefully choreographed assemblages with objects and unconscious mechanisms as active characters. Her work investigates how desire is projected onto objects and shaped within systems of consumption and representation, unfolding as a multiplicity of symbolic and affective layers.
The series continues to explore Sánchez-Kane’s roots in fashion, where she began as a designer, and his obsession with clothing is still a central part of her artistic practice. As Sánchez-Kane says “I like the possibilities of exploration…for Sofía and me, using these objects, was exciting. My job was just putting them together in an orgy.”
Designed by Brooklyn based designer Alex Lin of Studio Lin the book includes an with an essay by the Mexican journalist, Guillermo Osorno. Osorno is an editor, media entrepreneur, and journalist living in Mexico City. He is a graduate of Columbia University’s journalism program and was editor in chief of the Latin American narrative journalism magazine, Gatopardo. Recently, he published Tengo que morir todas las noches, a story of ’80s underground and gay culture in Mexico City, and launched the news analysis website Horizontal.mx.
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thursday, august 28, 6 pm
free admission