My, my love had been frozen Deep blue, but you painted me golden Oh, and you held me close Oh, how was I to know that
Who Killed Sara? - Alex and Elisa
seen from Türkiye
seen from Mexico

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Philippines

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Yemen
My, my love had been frozen Deep blue, but you painted me golden Oh, and you held me close Oh, how was I to know that
Who Killed Sara? - Alex and Elisa
I refuse to believe I am the only one who ships Chema and Alex.
Lorenzo and Chema are cute and wholesome, but honestly Chema and Alex??
The flavour.
I really tried not to ship them, but I am a sucker for reunion trope. The story line would have been way more interesting than whatever Alex and Elise had.
Edit: So I watche the rest amd I don't like Lorenzo that much anymore.
Alejandro Guzman
Alejandro Guzman
Only one more week left to see Totems at 125 Maiden Lane, featuring work by Linda Ganjian and Alejandro Guzmán!
Ganjian’s and Guzmán's intricate sculptures are ingrained with personal and political examinations of rediscovered histories. Through the quiet buildup of disparate materials and references, the artists create elaborate monuments to a forgotten age, the recent past, or an imminent future.
Linda Ganjian's work reinterprets Middle Eastern and American craft traditions in unexpected media. Through detailed and precise construction of miniature forms, Ganjian creates memorials to memories and histories of specific sites. In her installation at 125 Maiden Lane, Lost and Found Languages and Cargo, Ganjian presents recent series of work: Uncontained Consumption, Consumerist Mandalas, and Extinct Alphabets. In Uncontained Consumption, the artist recreates the sites of container ship accidents, using plaster casts of discarded packaging from consumer goods to display a beautiful and horrific ocean landscape.
Her Extinct Alphabets towers and table-top sculpture are constructed from the letter forms of obsolete languages, each a monument to a culture lost but not forgotten. Building up the grandiose out of small detailed pieces, Ganjian's work reorganizes the chaotic disarray of history into delicate dedications.
Contrasting with the archaeological repose in Ganjian's work, Alejandro Guzmán presents his sculptures as raised monoliths above the viewer's eye level, offering an imposing sentinel's welcome into the 125 Maiden Lane atrium. Ecstatic Fellowship presents a collection of 'performance sculpture' that playfully challenges viewers to join in a world of unrestricted possibilities. Part of Guzmán's ongoing Creative Misunderstandings series, each work is a vessel for physical and spiritual embodiment. When activated by a performer – through dance, monologue, improvisation, and traditional ritual – the sculpture serves as a monumental mask, provoking new ways for social interaction. Social frustration, shared and individual histories are central to the work: Guzmán makes references to his own family history and to his involvement with the Petrorada of Haiti, the Vejigante of Puerto Rico, and the Nkisi of central Africa. Guided by a provocative spirit towards performance, his totemic monuments serve as conduits between esoteric spiritual practice and art production.
Linda Ganjian is a Queens-based artist who works in a variety of materials, from clay to cement to paper. Her work has been exhibited in New York and abroad. Exhibition highlights include: Depo, Istanbul; Auxiliary Projects; Artspace, New Haven, CT; National Academy of Design; Socrates Sculpture Park; Queens Museum; Storefront for Art and Architecture; eyewash@Boreas Gallery; the Brooklyn Museum of Art; and Stedelijk museum de Lakenhal in Leiden, Holland. She has received grants from: the Queens Council on the Arts; Pollack-Krasner Foundation; Artslink; and fellowships to: Saltonstall, MacDowell, Millay, and Vermont Studio Center. She has completed public art commissions for the NYC School Construction Authority at IS230 in Queens and for the MTA at the 111th street A train station in Queens. She received her B.A. from Bard College in 1992 and her MFA from Hunter College CUNY in 1998.
Alejandro Guzmán (b. Puerto Rico, 1978) received his B.A. at the University of Colorado at Boulder and M.F.A. from the School of Visual Arts in New York City. He studied at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine in 2012. Recent exhibitions have included performance and sculpture at the Brooklyn Museum, Seattle Art Museum, Bronx Museum of the Arts, El Museo Del Barrio, Faena Forum, The Calder Foundation, The Queens Museum, Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art, Toledo Museum of Art and Taller Boricua. Guzmán had held residencies at the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council in New York, NY; Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA; MadArt in Seattle, WA; The New Roots Foundation in Guatemala and Headlands Center for the Arts in San Francisco, CA.
#artselfie as an Intellectual Derelict?
In La Bienal 2013, at El Museo del Barrio, I came across Alejandro Guzmán's mixed-media piece, Intellectual Derelict/Vago Intellectual.
I saw it as a challenge, in more ways than one.
en memoria de Ale Guzmán, te voy a extrañar amigo
Five MFA Fine Arts Alumni Featured in ‘Bronx Calling: The Second AIM Biennial’
Five MFA Fine Arts alumni are participating in “Bronx Calling: The Second AIM Biennial,” a multi-site exhibition presented at the Bronx Museum of the Arts, Wave Hill, and 1285 Avenue of the Americas Art Gallery, on view through September 8. Katie Cercone (2011), Alejandro Guzman (2009), Naoko Ito (2009), Wade Schaming (2010), and Diana Shpungin (2002) all have work included in the exhibition featuring emerging artists engaged in the Artist in the Marketplace (AIM) Program, which provides professional development opportunities for emerging artists in the greater New York City area.
In addition to having their work on display in “Bronx Calling,” the exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. For more info, visit bronxmuseum.org.