Creating art is an act of courage, strength, and conviction. Let's not talk about rules to follow or awards to win, but what it means to create art: to show yourself to the world, to let others see what you feel, think, and dream. That is why we share with you the evolution of art in Latin America and the evolution of those who have taken the risk to show themselves to the world.
In Jacaranda, we are convinced that art is not for a few; it is for everyone.
Today, we want to tell the story of art in Latin America and inspire you with five young artists who are changing the way we see and live art. Each one, with their own style and voice, continues to demonstrate that the limits of art are as broad as our imagination.
1. Carlos Motta
A Colombian multidisciplinary artist who challenges the "traditional" and gives voice to low-income communities. His work, which mixes installation, video, and performance, invites us to question what we think we know and to understand art as a space for activism and memory.
2. Lucía Vidales
This Mexican artist has managed to captivate many with her canvases full of textures and fragmented figures. Lucia explores memory and identity. Her works breathe, taking the viewer to an encounter where the personal and the collective come together in a constant dialogue.
3. Donna Conlon
This Panamanian has become a master of video art, using everyday objects to tell stories about ecology, urbanism, and contemporary life. Her pieces have a real and honest beauty that speaks of who we are as a society and the impact of our actions.
4. Tania Candiani
Tania is a bridge between art, science, history, and technology. Her installations and public interventions transform spaces, making the viewer an integral part of the work. This Mexican artist is a reminder that art is not only contemplated, but also lived.
5. Santiago Yahuarcani
An artist who has taken the tradition of his Amazonian community to another level, Santiago is Peruvian and paints to preserve and transmit the Uitoto cosmovision. His works are visual narratives that connect us with nature, ancestral memory, and cultural resistance.
To take the risk of starting to create is to open the door to a part of you that has always been there, waiting to come out. And when you do, you enter a universe shared by thousands of people, just as these artists who today excel with art in Latin America have done.
Art does not ask permission. These artists teach us that there is no single path to create, that you can start today with whatever you have at hand, and that each work, no matter how small it may seem, can transform the way someone sees the world.
Grab the brush, open the notebook, turn on the camera. Art is waiting for you.