For the Eighth Annual Symposium of Latin American Art, artists, activists, graduate students, and emerging scholars convened at the Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA) to discuss the theme, “A Matter of Time: Chronodissidence in the Americas,” examining unfixed temporalities that explore plurality, experimentation, and resistance.
For the third panel in the symposium, speakers presented on the theme of "Spilling Over: Ornament, Excess, and Unfixed Temporalities."
This video includes the presentation "Boa Baroque: Temporal and Corporal Intersections between Tupinambá and Jesuits in the 17th-Century Amazon" by Mateus Carvalho Nunes, postdoctoral researcher, Universidade de São Paulo.
Established in 2016, the Annual Symposium features graduate students, scholars, and artists who present original research and discourse on Latin American and Latinx art and visual culture. This international event is supported by ISLAA and organized by graduate students at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; the Graduate Center, City University of New York; and Columbia University.
Learn more about the Eighth Annual Symposium of Latin American Art: [ Ссылка ]
© Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA)
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