Imaginaries of the Expanded City

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CP Projects Space at the School of Visual Arts presents "Imaginaries of the Expanded City," an exhibition curated by MA Curatorial Practice fellow Andrea Valencia Aranda.As the capital of a country as well as a state, Mexico City has a particular political structure, history and geography—situated on a plateau 2,000 meters above sea level. Of course, this emblematic Latin American city also has much in common with other major cities around the world, including their challenges: technological boundaries, resource limitations, poor infrastructure, ecological concerns and economic inequality. For this exhibition, five Mexico City-based artists use the idea of the city as an image and a workplace that constantly seeps into their personal lives, experiences and memories—or most importantly, into their imaginaries. The show aims to recreate some of the effects on and affects of city dwellers by highlighting how the urban landscape's social, economic and political conditions are interiorized and recreated in a series of imaginaries that allow them to comprehend, apprehend and act in the dynamics of city life.Artists Enrique Arriaga, Amauta García, Iván Martínez, Antonio Monroy and Juan Pablo de la Vega use different strategies and media to deal with the expanded city. More than tracing or trying to render the city as a literal space, the artists address their relationships to it metaphorically, fictively and personally. For more information, click here or visit macp.sva.edu.CP Projects Space at the School of Visual Arts presents "Imaginaries of the Expanded City," an exhibition curated by MA Curatorial Practice fellow Andrea Valencia Aranda.As the capital of a country as well as a state, Mexico City has a particular political structure, history and geography—situated on a plateau 2,000 meters above sea level. Of course, this emblematic Latin American city also has much in common with other major cities around the world, including their challenges: technological boundaries, resource limitations, poor infrastructure, ecological concerns and economic inequality. For this exhibition, five Mexico City-based artists use the idea of the city as an image and a workplace that constantly seeps into their personal lives, experiences and memories—or most importantly, into their imaginaries. The show aims to recreate some of the effects on and affects of city dwellers by highlighting how the urban landscape's social, economic and political conditions are interiorized and recreated in a series of imaginaries that allow them to comprehend, apprehend and act in the dynamics of city life.Artists Enrique Arriaga, Amauta García, Iván Martínez, Antonio Monroy and Juan Pablo de la Vega use different strategies and media to deal with the expanded city. More than tracing or trying to render the city as a literal space, the artists address their relationships to it metaphorically, fictively and personally. For more information, click here or visit macp.sva.edu.

School of Visual Arts - SVA
209 East 23 Street
l 800.436. New York
United states
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http://www.sva.edu/events/events-exhibitions/imaginarie...

Tags

Art, American, city, Artist,

Selection of further exhibitions in: United states

24.01.3086 - 24.03.3086
Mexican and Latino Art Museum | San Francisco | In Association With The Smithsonian Institution - Th
Fort Mason Center, 2 Marina Blvd., Building D
San Francisco

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Imaginaries of the Expanded City School of Visual Arts - SVA Main address: School of Visual Arts - SVA 209 East 23 Street l 800.436. New York, United states School of Visual Arts - SVA 209 East 23 Street l 800.436. New York, United states CP Projects Space at the School of Visual Arts presents "Imaginaries of the Expanded City," an exhibition curated by MA Curatorial Practice fellow Andrea Valencia Aranda.As the capital of a country as well as a state, Mexico City has a particular political structure, history and geography—situated on a plateau 2,000 meters above sea level. Of course, this emblematic Latin American city also has much in common with other major cities around the world, including their challenges: technological boundaries, resource limitations, poor infrastructure, ecological concerns and economic inequality. For this exhibition, five Mexico City-based artists use the idea of the city as an image and a workplace that constantly seeps into their personal lives, experiences and memories—or most importantly, into their imaginaries. The show aims to recreate some of the effects on and affects of city dwellers by highlighting how the urban landscape's social, economic and political conditions are interiorized and recreated in a series of imaginaries that allow them to comprehend, apprehend and act in the dynamics of city life.Artists Enrique Arriaga, Amauta García, Iván Martínez, Antonio Monroy and Juan Pablo de la Vega use different strategies and media to deal with the expanded city. More than tracing or trying to render the city as a literal space, the artists address their relationships to it metaphorically, fictively and personally. For more information, click here or visit macp.sva.edu.CP Projects Space at the School of Visual Arts presents "Imaginaries of the Expanded City," an exhibition curated by MA Curatorial Practice fellow Andrea Valencia Aranda.As the capital of a country as well as a state, Mexico City has a particular political structure, history and geography—situated on a plateau 2,000 meters above sea level. Of course, this emblematic Latin American city also has much in common with other major cities around the world, including their challenges: technological boundaries, resource limitations, poor infrastructure, ecological concerns and economic inequality. For this exhibition, five Mexico City-based artists use the idea of the city as an image and a workplace that constantly seeps into their personal lives, experiences and memories—or most importantly, into their imaginaries. The show aims to recreate some of the effects on and affects of city dwellers by highlighting how the urban landscape's social, economic and political conditions are interiorized and recreated in a series of imaginaries that allow them to comprehend, apprehend and act in the dynamics of city life.Artists Enrique Arriaga, Amauta García, Iván Martínez, Antonio Monroy and Juan Pablo de la Vega use different strategies and media to deal with the expanded city. More than tracing or trying to render the city as a literal space, the artists address their relationships to it metaphorically, fictively and personally. For more information, click here or visit macp.sva.edu. Book tickets