THE DISAPPEARED (LOS DESAPARECIDOS)

THE DISAPPEARED (LOS DESAPARECIDOS)

El Museo del Barrio

Nicolás Guagnini, 30.000, detail. 1998-2005, acrylic on wood, 45.5 x 45.5 x 51 inches. Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York. Acquired through PROARTISTA: Sustaining the Work of Living Contemporary Artists, a fund from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Trust and a donation from the artist.

February 20, 2007

EL MUSEO DEL BARRIO PRESENTS THE DISAPPEARED (LOS DESAPARECIDOS)
February 23-June 17, 2007

Press Preview: Wednesday, February 21
11:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m. </p>

El Museo del Barrio, New Yorks premier Latino and Latin American cultural institution, will present The Disappeared (Los Desaparecidos) from February 23 June 17, 2007. This traveling exhibition, organized by the North Dakota Museum of Art and curated by Laurel Reuter, brings together visual artists responses to the tens of thousands of persons who were kidnapped, tortured, killed and vanished in Latin America by repressive right-wing military dictatorships during the late-1950s to the 1980s.
The Disappeared (Los Desaparecidos) gathers 14 contemporary living artists from seven countries in Central and South America (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, Uruguay and Venezuela), all of whose work contends with the horrors and violence stemming from the totalitarian regimes in each of their nations during the mid- to late-20th century. Some of the artists worked in the resistance; some had parents or siblings who were disappeared; others were forced into exile. The youngest were born into the aftermath of those dictatorships. And still others have lived in countries maimed by endless civil war. These artists whose work is represented in the exhibition are Marcelo Brodsky, Luis Camnitzer, Arturo Duclos, Juan Manuel Echavarría, Antonio Frasconi, Nicolás Guagnini, Nelson Leirner, Sara Maneiro, Cildo Meireles, Oscar Muñoz, Ivan Navarro, Luis González Palma, Ana Tiscornia and Fernando Traverso. Also included is a collaborative installation Identity/Identidad by a collective of 13 Argentinean artists.

The range of visual languages — drawings, prints, photographs, installations and mixed media — incorporated in The Disappeared (Los Desaparecidos) frequently employs similar forms to evoke the presence of the missing person or persons. Bodies, faces, personal possessions and names, often methodically compiled and arranged, appear both boldly and subtly throughout the work in the exhibition. Through their intense visual and emotional impact, these works communicate the unspeakable and reveal the artists assumed role of social responsibility towards ending the silence surrounding these extreme cases of human rights violations, says Julián Zugazagoitia, Director of El Museo del Barrio. In this context of public awareness and education through art, El Museo, as the first venue in the Eastern United States for this internationally traveling exhibition, aims to assemble as broad an audience as possible to confront and preserve the memory of these recent historical tragedies.

Free public programs for adults, educators and children will be offered in relation to the exhibition and to encourage dialogue among viewers. Scheduled programming includes a series of film screenings, monthly family tours and workshops, an evening of music as a tribute to los desaparecidos on March 23, and an artist panel moderated by Columbia University Professor Andreas Huyssen on May 23. A bilingual illustrated color exhibition catalogue written by Laurel Reuter and Lawrence Weschler and produced by Charta, Italy with funding from The Lannan Foundation will accompany The Disappeared (Los Desaparecidos).

Sponsors for The Disappeared (Los Desaparecidos) are the Otto Bremer Foundation, the Andy Warhol Foundation and the Lannan Foundation. This exhibition has also been supported in part by a grant from the Open Society Institute, and by Mahnaz I. and Adam Bartos.

El Museo del Barrio
1230 Fifth Avenue between 104th and 105th Streets
New York, NY 10029
212-831-7272

www.elmuseo.org

Press Contact: Lauren Van Natten
T. 212 660 7102
lvannatten@elmuseo.org

Museum Hours:
Wednesday – Sunday, 11AM to 5PM. Closed on Monday and Tuesday.

Directions:
By subway: #6 to 103rd Street Station, #2, #3 to Central Park North/110th Street station
By bus: M1, M3, M4 on Madison and Fifth Avenues to 104th Street; local crosstown service between Yorkville or East Harlem and the Upper West Side in Manhattan M96 and M106 or M2.

El Museo del Barrio

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February 20, 2007

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