“Versions of the South” and “Losing the Human Form”: Latin Americans Look at Themselves in the Mirror of their Art

  • Carlos Jiménez Moreno Universidad Europea de Madrid
Keywords: art history, international art exhibitions, Latin American art, Anglo-American look, Ibero-American looks, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Red de conceptualismos del Sur

Abstract

This article focuses on “Versiones del Sur” (2000) and “Perder la forma humana” (2012). These two exhibitions of Latin American art are distinguished within their made-in-Spain genre, because they were the first whose curators were Latin American. Their concepts and contents are analysed, and - in order to present differences between the Anglo-American and Ibero-American perspectives of this art - they are contrasted with those of two exhibitions that also offered ambitious panoramas of the art of the continent: “Arte Iberoamericano: 1820-1980” (1989) and “Artistas latinoamericanos del siglo XX” (1992).

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Published
2020-06-22
How to Cite
Jiménez Moreno, C. (2020). “Versions of the South” and “Losing the Human Form”: Latin Americans Look at Themselves in the Mirror of their Art. REVISTA DE HISTORIOGRAFÍA (RevHisto), (33), 67-81. https://doi.org/10.20318/revhisto.2020.5485
Section
Special issue