Nos alegra compartir que hemos sido invitados por Hangar, el centro de producción e investigación artística en Barcelona, a participar en la primera edición de PEEP que se celebrará el 12 y 13 de marzo de 2026. El evento combinará presentaciones, conversaciones y sesiones de feedback, y ha sido planteado como “un espacio de encuentro, diálogo y experimentación entre lxs artistas residentes de Hangar, profesionales invitadxs del ámbito local, nacional e internacional y el público general” con el objetivo de “explorar y profundizar en los procesos creativos de lxs artistas, compartir metodologías y generar nuevas conexiones profesionales”.
Las jornadas culminarán con una programación pública que incluirá charlas, proyecciones, visitas a los estudios y una performance colectiva.
Para esta edición 2026, Hangar reunirá a Devrim Bayar (senior curator, KANAL-Centre Pompidou), Barbara Horvath (curadora, PART International Art Residency), Caroline Dumalin (directora artística, Morpho, y curadora del Pabellón de Bélgica en la Bienal de Venecia 2026), Jesús Alcaide (Córdoba), Ane Rodríguez Armendariz (responsable de Arte por venir, programa de la Fundación Carasso), Ismaël Chappaz (galería House of Chappaz), Mariana Cánepa (Latitudes), Max Andrews (Latitudes), Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz (directora de exposiciones y de la colección, Centro Botín), María Montero Sierra (Madrid/Londres), Olivier Collet (galería Prats Nogueras Blanchard) y Rosa Lleó (curadora independiente, Barcelona).
Asimismo, participan lxs artistas y proyectos residentes: Ali Arévalo, Oriol Arnedo Casas, Kate Bohunnis, Ari Cardozo, Mourae, Eduard Ruiz, Laura Sub1, Silvia Zayas, Huaqian Zhang, Victor Pérez-Pallarès Setó, Aura Roig, Sara Miravet Núñez, Grandeza Studio, Efe Ce Ele, Lara Campos, Lumbung Press, #Blendícete y Hamaca.
jueves, 12 de marzo de 2026
9:30–18:30 h Visitas de estudio
19:30 – 20:30 h | Hamaca, un archivo a contrapelo: proyecciones de Jaione Camborda, Raquel Friera y Cecilia Barriga
El archivo se sostiene sobre unos puntales que llamamos taxonomías; al mismo tiempo, por dentro lo recorre una malla invisible que, a contrapelo, es capaz de reconectar todo. Desde la inmensidad del fondo audiovisual de Hamaca, este programa hilvana tres piezas que abren mundos marcados por la austera relación entre cuerpos. La intensidad física y simbólica de un ritual ancestral en Rapa das Bestas (Jaione Camborda, 2017), filmado de cerca con la sensibilidad que favorece la película; la vulneración de derechos y el vacío legal de los CIE que denuncia 1.432.327 m² (Raquel Friera, 2012), cuestionando, al mismo tiempo, el papel de la artista mediadora; y, por último, el torrente de afectos que retrata Im Fluss (Cecilia Barriga, 2007), acompañando con una handycam a dos mujeres que piensan la pérdida mientras celebran una vida compartida.
viernes, 13 de marzo de 2026
10:30 – 13 h Visitas de estudio
17 – 19 h | Talleres Abiertos
Ali Arévalo / Oriol Arnedo Casas / Kate Bohunnis / Ari Cardozo/ Mourae / Eduard Ruiz / Laura Sub1 / Silvia Zayas / Huaqian Zhang / Víctor Pérez-Pallarès Setó / Aura Roig / Sara Miravet Núñez / Grandeza Studio / Efe Ce Ele / Lara Campos / Lumbung Press/ #Blendícete / Hamaca
19 – 20 h | How Do You Do?
Conversación con Caroline Dumalin, Devrim Bayar y Barbara Horvath
La charla “How Do You Do?” explora, a partir de su doble sentido —“¿cómo estás?” y “¿cómo lo haces?”— las prácticas y valores institucionales que no siempre son explícitos ni debatidos públicamente, así como las dinámicas que sostienen las programaciones, las relaciones entre contexto local y global y los procesos colectivos que definen las identidades institucionales.
20:30 – 22 h | Sentía voces dentro de mi cabeza, sí, nos susurraban
Performance con Ali Arévalo, Ari Cardozo, Aura Roig, Kate Bohunnis, Eduard Ruiz, emocee, Lara Campos, Laura Sub1, Mourae, Oriol Arnedo Casas, Victor Pérez-Pallarès Setó
Lxs artistas residentes de Hangar proponen una performance colectiva que activa un espacio de escucha e imaginación compartida. A través de reflexiones, relatos fragmentarios y derivas mentales, las voces individuales se entretejen hasta configurar un cuerpo colectivo que susurra, piensa y resuena dentro y fuera de la cabeza.
Max Andrews and Mariana Cánepa Luna of Latitudes are among the 120 Members who have successfully achieved individual Active Membership 2024 with the Gallery Climate Coalition (GCC).
This marks the third consecutive year that Latitudes members have renewed their individual Active Membership. To renew our individual Active status (guidelines here), we continued implementing environmental sustainability best practices in line with GCC’s guidelines, focusing on near-term tangible actions, and met three of the following criteria:
1. Measure Impact: Submit a 12-Month Carbon Report, OR Major Project Carbon Report, OR Climate Impact Report.
2. Take Action: Demonstrate Climate Action OR Environmental Responsibility Rider.
3. Publicly Commit: Sign and Publish an Environmental Responsibility Statement.
4. Review and Reflect: Submit a minimum 500-word narrative that elaborates on your application and your climate efforts from the past year.
Each of us completed a CO2e report. Our joint carbon emissions were 16.18 tCO2e in 2019 (our baseline year), decreasing progressively to 3.66 tCO2e (2022), 1.91 tCO2e (2023), and 1.63 tCO2e (2024). Our carbon footprint reporting includes emissions across various aspects of our operations: air and surface travel (long-distance and regional trains, coach, taxi, car, metro, bus and ferry), accommodation (hotel, self-catered properties), energy consumption (electricity and gas), and, since 2024, digital usage (web hosting, cloud storage, sent emails and video calls). We use the GCC Carbon Calculator to conduct annual audits and ensure consistent and accurate reporting.
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To mark Latitudes’ 20th anniversary this April 2025, we have refreshed the design of our Portfolio. The 10th edition is available in desktop, mobile, and print formats.
Looking back, our first anniversary in April 2006 was a whirlwind. We were deep in the editorial process of “LAND, ART: A Cultural Ecology Handbook” (published in December 2006), an anthology co-published by the Royal Society of Arts in the framework of their Arts & Ecology programme (2005–10) and Arts Council England. Amid that hectic process, we forgot to commemorate.
Five years later, in 2010, we marked the occasion with our 22nd newsletter – our first featuring a birthday candle. At the time, we were gearing up for a road trip from Barcelona to London to take part in another milestone: Tate Modern's 10th Anniversary. To mark the occasion, artist Maurizio Cattelan and curators Cecilia Alemani and Massimiliano Gioni organised the second edition of NO SOUL FOR SALE - A Festival of Independents, which occupied Tate's Turbine Hall for a long weekend in mid-May 2010. Our journey was itself an artwork—Martí Anson, in his role as artist-cum-chauffeur, drove us to London and back as part of his project “Mataró Chauffeur Service”, ensuring we arrived in style (or rather truly tired) for the celebration.
The 2020 redesign remains largely intact today, with a few updates, including the font.
We can't believe two decades have flown by since we decided to give it a go as freelancers. This April 2025 finds us recovering from two major exhibitions that opened this past February– two much-anticipated solo exhibitions in Madrid. The first is the survey of Mexican-born, Bilbao-based artist Jorge Satorre at the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo in Móstoles. The second is also a survey, featuring 10+ years of work by Barcelona-based artist Laia Estruch, at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. Both exhibitions are accompanied by the artists’ first monographs, covering works created from 2011 to the present. Estruch’s monograph will be available later in Spring, while Satorre’s, co-published by Museo CA2M and Caniche Editorial, is already available for purchase online (€30, including shipping within Spain) here and from Museo CA2M front desk.
Speaking of books, we are pleased to announce that our publications are now more widely accessible. The Library and Documentation Centre of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (Madrid, Spain) has been added to the list of institutions where a complete (or nearly complete: monographs such as Lara Almarcegui’s have long been out of print) collection of Latitudes publications is available for public reference.
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We are pleased to announce that Max Andrews and Mariana Cánepa Luna of Latitudes have successfully qualified to be in the first cohort of Active Members of the Gallery Climate Coalition (GCC). To achieve this status we had to demonstrate that our organisation had implemented environmental sustainability best practices in line with GCC’s guidelines.
This initiative marks an evolution in GCC’s strategy from awareness raising and community building to one focusing on the near-term tangible progress of members following three key actions:
As part of the initiative, GCC provides qualifying members with a badge (see below) to recognise and celebrate the actions taken. These badges are year-stamped and members have to re-submit annually to retain the latest Active designation.
Active Membership is neither a certification of sustainability nor a claim that we are doing things perfectly and have all the answers — none of us are at this point. Yet it does entail transparency in the assessment, reporting, and reduction of climate impact, the setting of targets in line with science, and the search for working solutions.
We encourage everyone to visit the Gallery Climate Coalition website to learn more about the initiative and how to get involved.
Moreover, Latitudes is part of the Founding Committee of the recently formed volunteer team, GCC Spain. To get involved, please contact: espana@galleryclimatecoalition.org
Active Membership Press Release, 10 May 2023.
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The December 2022 monthly Cover Story “The Melt Goes On Forever. David Hammons and DART Festival” is now up on our homepage: www.lttds.org
“Latitudes has been collaborating with Dart, the documentary film festival that focuses exclusively on contemporary art, since its inception in 2017. Its sixth edition has just taken place in Barcelona at Sala Phenomena, Cinemes Girona, and MACBA (24-30 November).” Continue reading
After December 2022 this story will be archived here.
Cover Stories are published on a monthly basis on Latitudes’ homepage featuring past, present or forthcoming projects, research, texts, artworks, exhibitions, films, objects or field trips related to our curatorial projects and activities.
The April 2022 monthly Cover Story “Mix & Match: Laia Estruch at PUBLICS” is now up on our homepage: www.lttds.org
“On 17 March 2022, the first event of a year-long “Parahosting” collaboration between Latitudes and PUBLICS took place in Helsinki. The Parahosting programme of PUBLICS began in 2018, and it has grown into a key method of decentering the authorship of the curatorial agency through a flexible, evolving, expanding, and sometimes messy, practice of working together.” Continue reading
→ After April 2022 this story will be archived here.
Cover Stories' are published on a monthly basis on Latitudes' homepage featuring past, present or forthcoming projects, research, texts, artworks, exhibitions, films, objects or field trips related to our curatorial projects and activities.
PUBLICS Parahosting began in the Autumn of 2018 and has grown into a key method of decentering its own curatorial authorship, and as an essential means of working together without boundaries or containment.
Through Parahosting PUBLICS supports its para-sites, para-institutions, and para-guests, and has grown into a flexible, evolving, expanding, and sometimes messy, programme. In 2020–2021 PUBLICS Parahosted curatorial studio Shimmer (Eloise Sweetman and Jason Hendrik Hansma) with a year-long project ACROSS THE WAY WITH… where artists, poets, philosophers, and curators from around the world were invited to explore the notion of intimacy through online readings.
Latitudes collaborated with PUBLICS in September 2019 as a partner organisation in the first edition of the multidisciplinary arts festival Today is Our Tomorrow initiated by PUBLICS, presenting the performance “Yegua-Yeta-Yuta” (2015-ongoing) by Argentina-born, Amsterdam-based artist Mercedes Azpilicueta.
In 2021, PUBLICS supported the production of Laia Estruch’s “Ocells Perduts” (Stray Birds, 2021), a new work commissioned for the first MACBA triennial exhibition “Panorama 21. Notes for an Eye Fire” (October 2021–February 2022).
About PUBLICS
PUBLICS is a curatorial agency with a dedicated library, event space and reading room in Helsinki, Finland. As such PUBLICS is an educational resource where critical learning, knowledge production and discursive programming are integral to its curatorial approach. Under the artistic direction of curator Paul O’Neill, with program manager Eliisa Suvanto, PUBLICS explores a “work together” institutional model with multiple overlapping objectives, thematic strands and collaborations.
https://www.publics.fi
About Laia Estruch
Laia Estruch’s practice hinges on the voice as a material reality—an expressive force and a medium that is expelled from the body. Over the last decade, her work has broached the fields of sculpture and contemporary art, spoken word, and experimental theatre, undertaking a kind of no-frills exploration of the voice’s communicative and emotive grammar while probing the conventions of staging it. Her interest focuses on the extremities and porosity of the spoken word in its relationship with song and raw sound. The articulation of noises and meanings often encompasses and exceeds human vocal language: breathing, exclamation, mumbling, ululation, cries and whispers. The voice is recast as an extraordinary, supra-human object. Estruch’s recent performances have involved scenes and routines in which her body is suspended above the ground, be it via the playground-like structures and inflatables of “Moat” (2016–2018), the swimming pool setting of “Crol” (2019), the hanging stage of “Ganivet” (2020–2021) or the monumental bird trap of “Ocells Perduts” (2021–2022).
Laia Estruch has a Bachelor’s Degree in Fine Arts from the Universitat de Barcelona (2010) and also studied at The Cooper Union, New York (2010). She has had solo exhibitions at the Fundació Joan Brossa, Barcelona (2020–2021); Capella de Sant Roc, Valls (2019); and Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona (2019). Her group exhibitions include “Panorama 21: Apunts per a un incendi dels ulls” MACBA Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (2021–2022), “La cuestión es ir tirando”, Centro Cultural de España, Mexico City (2020), and “Back to School”, Fundación Rafael Botí, Córdoba (2018). In 2022 she won the 6th Premio Cervezas Alhambra de Arte Emergente (Alhambra Beer Award for Emerging Art) and in 2021 she was awarded the Premi Ciutat de Barcelona (City of Barcelona Prize) in the category of Visual Arts.
https://laiaestruch.com
About Latitudes
Find out more at https://www.lttds.org/about/
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