The best of Buenos Aires beyond arteBA

Arts

The arteBA art fair in Buenos Aires, which opened yesterday amid economic upheaval, marks a week of major exhibitions in Argentina's capital. Here are some top contemporary art shows at museums and galleries around the city.

Lolo y Lauti's work in What you talking about it? at UV Estudios

What you talking about it?, UV Studios, until 31 May: Functioning as both an artist collective, residence and gallery, UV Estudios specialises in new media and performance work that explores queer identity through lighthearted humour and incisive cultural critique, continuing a rich history of Buenos Airess alternative exhibition and gathering spaces. Its current group exhibition, What you talking about it? includes work by all of the gallery's current artists. Among them is Lolo y Lauti, whose solo booth at ArteBA has proven popular for its Me Huevo Loca performance in which around a dozen people dressed as French fries sleep under an egg-shaped duvet.

José Luis Landet's work in his solo show Ghostly Haunting, Walden Gallery

José Luis Landet: Ghostly Haunting, Walden Gallery, until 10 May: In a solo show at Walden Gallery, in the city's Almirante Brown neighbourhood, the Argentinian artist José Luis Landet's mixed media works confuse time, place and even materials. While his abstract paintings reveal spectral lines from marks made and erased or covered over, the occasional cement head pokes out of them. It is the monumental wall of disembodied fists, aligned in a grid and all held upright as if in a sign of power and resistance, that is the most haunting.

Ana Prata's work in the exhibition Sorte at Isla Flotante

Ana Prata: Sorte, Isla Flotante, until 17 May: The Brazilian artist Ana Prata's densely layered paintings vary from figurative to abstract, with tiny meticulous marks to chaotic gestures, but they all address the theme of destiny or luck, the rough translation of the Portuguese word "sorte". Schematic renderings of moons and black cats, paired with geometric shapes and bright fields of colour, represent the two poles between which belief is based: reason and superstition—or what some might just call intuition.

Proyecto Yungas at the Museum of Latin American Art Buenos Aires (Malba)

Proyecto Yungas, Museum of Latin American Art Buenos Aires (Malba), until 2 June: This marks the first group exhibition in Buenos Aires of the Proyecto Yungas, an experimental arts initiative named after thRead More – Source

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