11 September 2024: After three full on days touring the fifteen venues of Manifesta 15 in Barcelona, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, El Prat de Llobregat, Cornellà, Sant Cugat, Santa Coloma de Gramenet, Sant Adrià del Besòs, Mataró, Sabadell, Terrassa and Granollers, Max Andrews (of Latitudes) and Angel Lambo share their highlights on frieze.com
11–13 September 2024: Press trip to Apertura, Madrid’s Gallery Weekend. Gallery highlights included solo exhibitions of Karlos Martínez B. at FormatoCómodo [photographed below, Max’s review published in Artforum’s December issue]; Jerónimo Elespe at Maisterravalbuena; Suzanne Treister at The Ryder Projects; or Patricia Gómez and María Jesús González at 1 Mira Madrid. Elsewhere in town, we managed to catch the last days of the fantastic “Art and Social Change in Spain (1885-1910)” at the Museo del Prado (annoyingly, no photos allowed) and the opening of Jacobo Castellano at Alcalá 31.
19–22 September 2024: Third art event of the month. This time, we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Barcelona Gallery Weekend. Highlights include Carles Congost at House of Chappaz; Rasmus Nilausen at Ethall (L'Hospitalet); Jochen Lempert at ProjecteSD; and exhibitions at non-commercial galleries, such as Victor Jaenada at Tecla Sala.
28 September 2024: Trip to Vic to attend Francesc Ruiz’s excellent “3 months, 3 weeks, 3 days” solo show at ACVIC Centre d'Arts Contemporànies:
“Francesc Ruiz's exhibition ‘3 months, 3 weeks, 3 days’ tackles the friction between animal exploitation, the food and tannery industries, logistics infrastructures, and the natural environment in the plain of Vic and its surrounding areas. The project opens up the already-existing imaginaries drawn from the history of comics, alternative hentai, and anti-speciesist feminism. The exhibition occupied three spaces in the town of Vic: ACVIC, Les Adoberies, and the Museu de l'Art de la Pell.” (excerpt from ACVIC website)
The exhibition was later awarded the 2024 ACCA Award for Best Artistic Projects and Initiatives, for “its visual investigation into animal exploitation and the meat industry, and for offering a critical perspective on the economic and environmental reality of the Plana de Vic.”
1 October 2024: In the Autumn of 2023, Lisa LeFeuvre, Executive Director of the Holt/Smithson Foundation, invited Latitudes to contribute to the foundation's Scholarly Text Program, writing on one artwork by Nancy Holt and/or Robert Smithson. The works written about range from landmark earthworks and texts to lesser-known drawings, moving-image works, and rarely-seen two-dimensional works.
Max decided to write on Robert Smithson’s text “Aerial Art” (Studio International, February–April 1969), and Mariana on Nancy Holt’s “Ventilation Systems” (1985–1992). The essays were published on the Foundation’s website in October 2024 and included images of the works, a short bibliography, endnotes pointing to the author’s references and an ISBN. The texts were featured as the October and November Monthly Cover Stories on Latitudes’ homepage.
5 October 2024: Visiting Espinavessa in Alt Empordà, to attend the opening of the three-person show “KIN” at the ever-gorgeous Spiritvessel, presenting works by Monia Ben Hamouda, Michele Gabriele and Andrew Birk, curated by Sira Pizà.
29 October, 12 and 13 November 2024: Co-teaching the module 'Contexts I: Environments: What Extraction? What Nature?' with artist Lara Almarcegui of the newly established MA in Critical Design, led by Cristina Goberna, at Elisava Barcelona School of Design and Engineering.
4-7 November 2024: Art trip to see exhibitions in Madrid (“31 Women. An exhibition of Peggy Guggenheim” at Fundación Mapfre and “Saul Steinberg, artista” at Fundación Juan March), Valladolid (Museo de Escultura and solo shows of Lara Almarcegui or Damaris Pan at Museo Patio Herreriano), Donostia (Gabriel Chaile at Tabakalera, and Bilbao (a truly memorable Hilma af Klint at Museo Guggenheim Bilbao and Angela de la Cruz at CarrerasMugica).
November 2024: Over the autumn, the seven International Volunteer Chapters (IVC) affiliated with Gallery Climate Coalition, have progressively come to wind up their activities. Since late 2022, GCC Spain has been one of them, creating localised content, hosting events, and engaging in environmental issues. Despite the efforts of the seven IVCs, the programme concluded due to funding challenges. Over the past three years, the IVC programme has provided valuable insights and built a strong international network of volunteers. Although GCC Spain will no longer operate as a formal IVC, its members will remain associated with GCC and continue their work informally. Read this link for more information about the work of GCC’s IVCs.
Between November 25 and 26, MACBA hosted a two-day symposium on Contemporary Art, Plastics and Sustainability. On the second day, Berlin-based conservator of modern materials and contemporary art, Kim Kraczon, spoke about her involvement with GCC as a key advisor to initiatives such as the Artist Toolkit, and shared some personal experiences from artists she worked with such as Chicago-based artist Mnenna Okore (who uses plant-based materials and each time the works are installed, she provides recipes to (re)make her works instead of shipping them); or Deville Cohen first prototype in a series of outdoor kinetic light sculptures that are powered by collected and stored solar energy. Deville collaborated with Kraczon to research sustainable materials and working methods and published a Climate Impact Report.
22 November 2024: First visit to Tecnodimensión, the company Laia Estruch has collaborated with for years to produce her pneumatic sculptures. During the visit, we met Eduard Pagès from the technical office, reviewed the condition of Estruch's work “Trena” (2023) following its exhibition at the Kortrijk Triennial, and discussed its adaptation for the upcoming presentation at the Museo Reina Sofía. Laia began exploring inflatable sculpture with “Moat 3” (2017), followed by “Crol” and “Tanc” (2019), and the wind sock of “Ocells perduts” (2021). More recently, she created her “Kite” series (2022–23) in collaboration with Tecnodimensión – the first of the series was acquired by the Generalitat de Catalunya for its national collection and is deposited at MORERA. Museu d’Art Modern i Contemporani de Lleida.
27 December 2024: Very happy to accompany Ibon Aranberri, winner of the first Fundació MACBA award (photographed) alongside the shortlisted candidates Sandra Gamarra, David Bestué and Cabello/Carceller. Max Andrews reviewed Aranberri’s survey exhibition “Entresaka”, which began at the Museo Reina Sofía and was later presented at ARTIUM Museoa – Museo de Arte Contemporáneo del País Vasco in Vitoria-Gasteiz (Basque Country) for frieze magazine.
In 2007, Latitudes guest-edited a special issue of 500 pages of UOVO magazine titled “Ecology, Luxury & Degradation” and invited curator Peio Aguirre to interview Ibon. The insightful result was titled “Cognitive Maps” and can be read here. The following year, we included Ibon’s “Luz de Lemóniz” (Light over Lemóniz) (2000–2004) in the exhibition Greenwashing. Environment: Perils, Promises and Perplexities at the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, and later that year, his work “Zuloa (Ir.T. no513)” (2004) was featured in the film and video programme we curated for the Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City—“A Stake in the Mud, A Hole in the Reel: Land Art's Expanded Field, 1968–2008”—and which later toured to seven venues in Europe.
1 December 2024: Max's review of Karlos B. Martínez printed in Artforum. “Comprising just four works, Karlos Martínez Bordoy’s exhibition “Folded Forms” was in part a droll reaction to the dimensions of FormatoComodo, among the smallest of Madrid’s commercial galleries. The exhibition’s hardworking conceit hinged on the so-called Murphy bed.” Continue reading here or check the January 2025 Cover Story.
17 December 2024: After a meeting with Anxo Casal, who is carefully editing Laia Estruch’s video pieces and short trailers for her forthcoming solo show at the Museo Reina Sofía, we gather our thoughts around several options (and more decisions to make) about the publication at a nearby cafeteria.
Most of November, December and well into January were spent pretty much full time in front of screens – mercifully, no photos exist of our tired faces – pouring over Satorre’s final monograph layouts, the gallery guide and the entrance text, and in parallel, Estruch’s monograph, wall labels, gallery guide, and entrance text. Fortunately, this time both are only English-Spanish bilinguals (living in Barcelona, we usually juggle three languages), and we’re lucky to have worked with an excellent team of editors, translators, proofreaders, and exhibition coordinators – credited on each of the exhibition pages. Their support has been invaluable in simultaneously managing the madness of preparing two shows, wrangling endless versions of “FINAL_FINAL_Really OK” PDFs of the respective monographs, and two (unsuccessful) open call applications.
2 January 2025: Happy New Year! Estruch's exhibition is now up on Museo Reina Sofía’s website!
13–20 January 2025: We received some images via WhatsApp of the tests conducted by the museum team on the circular windows intended for Estruch's exhibition. The exchange serves to confirm the diameter and height. A few days later, a wooden frame was inserted and subsequently painted. These three circular openings – two in the smaller gallery, one in the larger gallery – will not only connect the exhibition to the outside world front and rear façades of the museum, but also conceptually align with the recurring circular shape in her works, such as in “Sibina” (2019), “Sirena” (2022), “Zócalo”, or the “Kite” series (2022-24).
15 January 2025: Max Andrews’ review of Gabriel Chaile's exhibition “Contemplando es como fuimos cambiando” at Tabakalera in Donostia, goes live on the frieze website.
“‘Contemplating Is How We Have Been Changing’, Tabakalera’s survey of Argentine artist Gabriel Chaile, deftly shows his ability to transform humble materials into vessels of ancestral knowledge and familial intimacy. The exhibition includes several of Chaile’s characteristic anthropomorphic and zoomorphic adobe sculptures, yet it also features a selection of impressive earlier works, and hints at new forays into film narrative and mythmaking.” Continue reading
16 January 2025: WhatsApp on fire. Laia Estruch is in a workshop outside Madrid today, welding on her markings on one of the slices of “Ganivet” [Cuchillo] (2021), a partial refabrication of the work originally presented at the Fundació Joan Brossa in Barcelona.
27 January–2 February 2025: Installation of Jorge Satorre’s survey exhibition “Ria” begins at the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo, Móstoles. Jorge had been installing a week before us, so he’s up to speed. His monograph “Río” [River] is on its way from the printers, Agpograf in Barcelona, to Madrid.
1 February 2025: Opening of Jorge Satorre’s “Ria” at the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo, Móstoles, the culmination of three years of conversations, site visits, ideas that never materialised and others that materialised as beautiful objects. Such is the case of his new work “Triplay” (2025), produced for the exhibition, and the adaptation of his 2016 work “Arruinar las baldosas” [Wrecking the Floor Tiles], which has become a large gate dividing the exhibition space. A selection of works produced since 2013 complements these wonderful projects.
We’re grateful to have accompanied Jorge throughout this process, to have cemented our artist-curator collaboration and a friendship that began two decades ago, when we visited his studio in Hangar, Barcelona. We first collaborated in 2009 commissioning a project for “Portscapes”, a series of interventions in the context of the expansion by 20% of the surface of the Port of Rotterdam, for which produced “The Erratic. Measuring Compensation” (2009–10) (now in the collection of the Museo Amparo in Puebla, Mexico – in September 2021, hosted by the museum, Jorge and us discussed this work in a conversation online).
Fascinated by the compensation projects created to ‘offset’ the construction of Maasvlakte 2, Satorre’s project traced the origin of a rock to southern Sweden and returned it there—an act of symbolic restitution. This transposition echoed the monumental land-forming of Maasvlakte, which, like glaciers, though on a much shorter timescale, reshaped the morphology of the Netherlands. Satorre’s drawings documented the process, blending factual and imagined details in a storyboard-like format. Watch the “making of” video here.
Soon after, in 2010, Mariana Cánepa Luna of Latitudes wrote about “The Erratic” and the works “My Dolmen” (2007-8) and “La Visita” (2010) for the catalogue of the group exhibition “Antes que todo” that took place at CA2M – pdf on Issuu here.
In February 2012, Latitudes published an interview in Atlántica magazine #52 with Erick Beltrán and Satorre on their curatorial project “Modelling Standard”. The PDF is available here.
A month later, in March 2012, Max Andrews of Latitudes gave a lecture at the Royal College of Art, London, around Robert Smithson’s ecological and curatorial art and discussed Satorre’s work, based on an essay published in the publication “Robert Smithson: Art in Continual Movement” (Alauda Publications, 2012).
We began working on the Madrid show in April 2022. In September 2022, we spent a day with Jorge in Barcelona following an itinerary he proposed for all of us to do as part of the final episode of “Incidents (of Travel)”, the online project produced by KADIST (Paris/San Francisco) and edited by Latitudes since 2016, which published twenty dispatches of day-long encounters between artists and curators from around the world.
13–26 February 2025: Trip to Madrid to install the survey exhibition “Laia Estruch: HELLO EVERYONE” at the Museo Reina Sofía, Madrid. The team had already prepared the space weeks before our arrival, and all the artworks had been unpacked, condition reports completed, and were ready to be installed.
16 February 2025: During the weekend between installation days, we were fortunate to visit la Catedral de Justo in Mejorada del Campo. The site itself deserves a full documentary. Built by Justo Gallego (1925–2021), the construction of the cathedral began in 1961, funded mainly through material and monetary donations. It was largely built by Gallego himself over more than 50 years, without plans and with barely any assistance.
The visit was organised by curator Pilar Soler Montes, who had curated the show “Lo camí del sol” by Felipe Talo (aka @leon.fenix and @lotti.fernand1888).
“Mariana and I would like to dedicate this exhibition to the memory of Richard Flood, an American curator who passed away last week and who was a key mentor for us. Flood said: "We only have a limited time to put things in front of the public, and we had better have a good reason to occupy the time of our colleagues and to believe that this will mean something to the public".
I think this project responds to just that idea: to give the audience a clear reason to stop, listen and experience. For fifteen years, Laia has been building a language that overflows the boundaries between voice, body and sculpture. This exhibition not only celebrates her trajectory, but, with the urgency and clarity that Flood demanded, it also asks why her work and her voice deserve this space and this time.
Mariana and I would like to thank you, Laia, for these five years of intense dialogue, for your generosity and for imagining together what it would mean to bring together all your work. The result is this beautifully crazy archive-warehouse exhibition that we are presenting today.”
25 February 2025: A very long yet exciting day presenting Laia Estruch’s “HELLO EVERYONE” at the Museo Reina Sofía, Madrid: 9am press interview with Agencia EFE; 11am press conference and tour to general media; 2pm lunch with lenders, catalogue collaborators and museum staff in the museum restaurant; back in the galleries for a 5pm and a 6pm tour for VIPs; and the public opening at 8pm to conclude the year-long ride.
5–9 March 2025: ARCOmadrid Art Fair week. Laia presented her performance “MIX” (2022–ongoing) in the exhibition at the Museo Reina Sofía, a living repertoire that weaves together the full range of vocal registers, modulations, and spoken and sung sounds she has cultivated throughout her artistic practice.
11 April 2025: Radio del Museo Reina Sofía publishes an interview between María Andueza and artist Laia Estruch around her solo exhibition “Hello Everyone”, on view at the museum until September 1, 2025.
24 April 2025: First of eleven work sessions of the 2025 Acquisitions Committee of the Col·lecció Nacional d'Art Contemporani (CNAC) of the Government of Catalunya – see 2024 acquisitions (in Catalan). Initial review of the 500+ proposals received in response to this year's open call. Some people are out of the picture; we usually are 14 to 16 people around the table.
12:33pm, 28 April 2025: Power cut between 12:33h and 18:34h. Went for a walk, spoke to our neighbours, read books, and “prayed” that our freezer would be ok.
30 April 2025: Celebrating 20 years of our curatorial life with the 10th edition of our portfolio (for print, for desktop or mobile versions). Returning to these pages can be a bittersweet exercise of time-travelling, revisiting projects, places, and people that have shaped our path. Updating the portfolio is less about archiving than it is about building memory, and tracing the quiet continuities and the leaps of change that have defined our practice.
4–13 May 2025: Family trip to Bath and a few days of art hunting around London. After 7 years, the city feels the same yet strangely very different.
10 May 2025: Museo Reina Sofía shares on their Instagram that Laia Estruch's book is now available at the museum bookstore.
Available in English and Spanish editions.
15 May 2025: Laia Estruch's first monograph is finally in our hands! After many wee and long hours of putting it together—conceptualising, writing, researching, fact-checking, editing texts, and proofreading—we are elated to have both editions in our hands. Feels unreal.
20 May 2025: First of three conversations with Caimin Walsh, an Irish curator based between Limerick and Co. Cork, currently serving as Curator of Civic Engagement at Ormston House, a Cultural Resource Centre in Limerick. We’re mentoring Caimin by sharing our curatorial experiences and offering feedback on two projects he’s currently developing.
These conversations are supported by a fantastic grant Caimin received from the Arts Council of Ireland/An Chomhairle Ealaíon to develop his curatorial practice. It’s heartening to know that such support structures exist, especially as curatorial work can often be a solitary pursuit. Unless one manages to establish informal peer-to-peer networks, honest and critical feedback is typically scarce. We applaud, once again, the work the Arts Council is doing – we still keep our “Has the artist been paid? ASK” badge from our 2013 research trip to Dublin and Derry.
Caimin was awarded the Visual Arts Bursary Award last year, a recurring scheme that offers up to €20,000 to support individual artists in developing their practice. The award provides recipients with the time and resources to think, research, reflect, and fully engage with their work.
We can’t overstate our envy that such schemes exist—or how much we wish something similar were available where we live. They would go a long way toward easing the precarity of the profession and offering freelancers much-needed relief from the constant pressure to rebuild their foundations—and from the recurring cycles of disillusionment when open calls or job searches, as is the case for us now, lead nowhere.
27–30 May 2025: Press trip to Lisboa on the occasion of ARCOLisboa art fair. As part of the organised trip, we're taken to visit the Alburquerque Foundation, Culturgest, Fundação PLMJ, MAC/CCB, Kunsthalle Lissabon, CAM Gulbenkian and Fundação Leal Rios. On our own steam, we visit MAAT, Galeria da Boavista, Fidelidade Arte/Culturgest and commercial galleries such as Vera Cortês, Madragoa, 3+1 Galeria, Cristina Guerra and, of course, many more gallery spaces at ARCOLisboa's Cordoaria.
Max will write a review of Joana Escoval’s exhibition “Tones of the Spine” at Galería Vera Cortês for Artforum.
4 and 7 June 2025: Following Laia Estruch's two inaugural performances during ARCOmadrid, the Museo Reina Sofía programmed two further performances. As we are unable to join Laia on this occasion, we are accompanying her via phone, Instagram, and numerous WhatsApp messages. Before jumping into the galleries, Laia shares the “Mix” score she will follow today, and Alex Moltó from the museum's Comms sends us some photos of Laia interacting with “Zócalo” (Baseboard) (2022) that he took during the morning rehearsal to share with the piece's lenders.
4 June 2025: On our way to Tarragona to meet our artist friend Quim Packard and visit the exhibition “S.I.E.P. (Sàpigues i Entenguis Produccions) Ràbia i desencís”, curated by our colleague Marc Navarro at the Museu d’Art Modern de la Diputació de Tarragona, we join the Instagram live of Laia Estruch's performance rehearsal at the Museo Reina Sofia. Returning to the purpose of the visit, the show revisits ephemera and works by the Reus-based postal art group SIEP, which operated between 1981 and 1984.
12–19 June 2025: Site visit to TEA Tenerife Espacio de las Artes in Santa Cruz de Tenerife in preparation for a show opening in July 2026. More details in the coming months.
3 July 2025: Jorge Satorre gives a tour of his exhibition “Ría” at Museo CA2M, followed by one by David Bestué presenting his show in the upper galleries.
5 July 2025: Review/interview “Laia Estruch saluda a todo el mundo” [Laia Estruch salutes everyone] by Sònia Hernández in La Vanguardia newspaper.
12 July 2025: The cultural supplement of El Correo newspaper publishes a review/interview with Jorge Satorre about his exhibition at Museo CA2M.
31 August 2025 and 1 September 2025: Jorge Satorre’s “Ría” exhibition ends at Museo CA2M, and the day after, “Laia Estruch: HELLO EVERYONE” finishes at the Museo Reina Sofía.
Jorge's publication is available online via Caniche Editorial or can be purchased at the front desk of Museo CA2M.
Laia Estruch's catalogue is available at La Central bookstore, at the Museum shop, or at the Librería del Ministerio de Cultura.
Looking forward to visiting Stockholm in mid-September to attend their September Sessions—a Contemporary Art Festival in Stockholm.
Also, in October, Danish painter John Kørner opens a show in Victoria Miro gallery’s space in Venice, for which Max has written a short text. Max wrote an essay for Kørner’s first show at the London gallery in 2006, “John Kørner: 2006 Problems”, and in 2017 contributed the essay “The Kørner Problem” for his monograph published by Roulette Russe.
July-August 2025 cover story on www.lttds.org. Frame video: Latitudes.
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Max Andrews and Mariana Cánepa Luna of Latitudes are among the 120 Members who have successfully achieved individual Active Membership 2024 with the Gallery Climate Coalition (GCC).
This marks the third consecutive year that Latitudes members have renewed their individual Active Membership. To renew our individual Active status (guidelines here), we continued implementing environmental sustainability best practices in line with GCC’s guidelines, focusing on near-term tangible actions, and met three of the following criteria:
1. Measure Impact: Submit a 12-Month Carbon Report, OR Major Project Carbon Report, OR Climate Impact Report.
2. Take Action: Demonstrate Climate Action OR Environmental Responsibility Rider.
3. Publicly Commit: Sign and Publish an Environmental Responsibility Statement.
4. Review and Reflect: Submit a minimum 500-word narrative that elaborates on your application and your climate efforts from the past year.
Each of us completed a CO2e report. Our joint carbon emissions were 16.18 tCo2e in 2019 (our baseline year), progressively reducing to 3.66 tCo2e (2022); 1.91 tCo2e (2023) and 1.63 tCo2e (2024). Our carbon footprint reporting includes emissions across various aspects of our operations: air and surface travel (long-distance and regional trains, coach, taxi, car, metro, bus and ferry), accommodation (hotel, self-catered properties), energy consumption (electricity and gas), and, since 2024, digital usage (web hosting, cloud storage, sent emails and video calls). We use the GCC Carbon Calculator to conduct annual audits and ensure consistent and accurate reporting.
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To mark Latitudes’ 20th anniversary this April 2025, we have refreshed the design of our Portfolio. The 10th edition is available in desktop, mobile, and print formats.
Looking back, our first anniversary in April 2006 was a whirlwind. We were deep in the editorial process of “LAND, ART: A Cultural Ecology Handbook” (published in December 2006), an anthology co-published by the Royal Society of Arts in the framework of their Arts & Ecology programme (2005–10) and Arts Council England. Amid that hectic process, we forgot to commemorate.
Five years later, in 2010, we marked the occasion with our 22nd newsletter – our first featuring a birthday candle. At the time, we were gearing up for a road trip from Barcelona to London to take part in another milestone: Tate Modern's 10th Anniversary. To mark the occasion, artist Maurizio Cattelan and curators Cecilia Alemani and Massimiliano Gioni organised the second edition of NO SOUL FOR SALE - A Festival of Independents, which occupied Tate's Turbine Hall for a long weekend in mid-May 2010. Our journey was itself an artwork—Martí Anson, in his role as artist-cum-chauffeur, drove us to London and back as part of his project “Mataró Chauffeur Service”, ensuring we arrived in style (or rather truly tired) for the celebration.
The 2020 redesign remains largely intact today, with a few updates, including the font.
We can't believe two decades have flown by since we decided to give it a go as freelancers. This April 2025 finds us recovering from two major exhibitions that opened this past February– two much-anticipated solo exhibitions in Madrid. The first is the survey of Mexican-born, Bilbao-based artist Jorge Satorre at the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo in Móstoles. The second is also a survey, featuring 10+ years of work by Barcelona-based artist Laia Estruch, at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. Both exhibitions are accompanied by the artists’ first monographs, covering works created from 2011 to the present. Estruch’s monograph will be available later in Spring, while Satorre’s, co-published by Museo CA2M and Caniche Editorial, is already available for purchase online (€30, including shipping within Spain) here and from Museo CA2M front desk.
Speaking of books, we are pleased to announce that our publications are now more widely accessible. The Library and Documentation Centre of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (Madrid, Spain) has been added to the list of institutions where a complete (or nearly complete: monographs such as Lara Almarcegui’s have long been out of print) collection of Latitudes publications is available for public reference.
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In 2024, several works acquired in recent years for the National Collection were presented in the three-part “MACBA Collection: Prelude. Poetic Intention” (2022–2025) at the Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona. Such as Mireia Sallarès’ photographs that are part of her larger project “Las muertes chiquitas” (2006-16); Joan Morey’s multipart project “COS SOCIAL. Lliço d'Anatomia” (SOCIAL BODY. Anatomy Lesson) (2017); Regina Giménez’s large paintings “Geo-gràfics” (2021); Sinéad Spelman’s drawings “Venes” (2020); Pedro Torres’ video installation “House of the Sun” (2020); Daniel G. Andújar “Battle Cry” (2019-2020”; Eulàlia Valldosera’s “Construcció i deconstrucció (I-VIII) (El melic del món #1; El ventre de la Terra #29)” (1991-2001); Lara Fluxà’s glass installation “Delu” (2019)”; Lucía C. Pino’s sculptures “10 Amazon Quarterly vol 03. (content)” (2022); or Lúa Coderch’s “Estil Internacional (Mur d'Ònix)” (2013-14), to mention a few.
Looking ahead, one of the most significant recent acquisitions of 2024, Eugènia Balcells’ 12-channel video installation “From the Center” (1982), will be presented this summer in the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya’s Sala Oval, where it has been placed on deposit. The installation premiered at the 1983 Donostiako Nazioarteko Bideo Aldia, II Festival de Vídeo de San Sebastián. It was subsequently exhibited at Barcelona’s renowned Sala Metrònom (1985), Anderson Gallery in Richmond, Virginia (1986), and New York’s El Museo del Barrio (1987).
“From the Center” is a technically complex and conceptually profound video installation described by Balcells as an “electronic Stonehenge”. Featuring twelve monolithic screens arranged in a walkable circle, it presents fragmented yet unified views of the world, filmed over two years from a fixed Manhattan rooftop. Accompanied by a twelve-channel soundscape by Peter Van Riper (1942-1998), the installation blends technology and spirituality, echoing Romantic ideals of universal connection and inviting comparisons to the mystical vision of Romanesque paintings in the MNAC’s collection.
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The March 2025 monthly Cover Story “Hello Everyone from the Museo Reina Sofía” is now up on our homepage: www.lttds.org (after March this story will be archived here).
“Curated by Latitudes, “Hello Everyone”—Laia Estruch’s largest exhibition to date—transforms the Museo Reina Sofía, in Madrid, into a resonant space for voice and sculptural presence. Across 27 works spanning more than a decade, Estruch shows how she has developed a performance language that is both physical and sonic, sculpting space with, and for, the force of vocalisation.” → Continue reading
Cover Stories are published monthly on Latitudes’ homepage, featuring past, present, or forthcoming projects, research, texts, artworks, exhibitions, films, objects, or field trips related to our curatorial projects and activities.
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