Global contemporary art events and news observed from New York City. Suggestion? Email us.

Cuba Returns Tania Bruguera’s Passport

Tuesday, July 14th, 2015

The Cuban government has returned artist Tania Bruguera’s passport, having held it for the past six months.  Despite its return, the artist has expressed her desire to remain in the country.  “My argument has never been about leaving Cuba; my argument is about working so there is freedom of expression and public protest in Cuba,” she says.  “People should feel free to say what they think without fear of losing their jobs or university standing, of being marginalized or imprisoned.” (more…)

Tania Bruguera Arrested Again During Opening Days of Havana Biennial

Monday, July 6th, 2015

The New York Times travels to the Havana Biennial this week, and notes the arrest of artist Tania Bruguera during the event, following the artist’s live reading of Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism, an event that cast something of a pall over the first Biennial legally accessible to American visitors. (more…)

Tania Bruguera Unable to Leave Cuba to Accept Award After Government Revokes her Passport

Tuesday, May 5th, 2015

Tania Brugera is one of the 2015 Herb Alpert Award recipients this year, but is unable to attend the awards ceremony, due to the revocation of her passport by the Cuban government.  “The Alpert Award could not come at a better moment,” the artist wrote in a statement to the organization. “The Cuban government does not like my artworks because I’m proposing that our relationship with politics is one where the script is not written for us, but is something we create with responsibility and honesty out of the desire to engage in our political destiny.” (more…)

Amidst Renewed Diplomacy Havana Braces for Rush of Collectors at Biennial

Wednesday, April 15th, 2015

With renewed diplomatic activities between Cuba and the United States this year, the Independent forecasts massive interest in this year’s Havana Biennial.  “Most of us are expecting that for the Biennial there will be an explosion of American collectors coming to buy,” says artist Mario González. “It should be a stampede.” (more…)

Group of Artists Issue Open Letter Condemning Cuba’s Actions Towards Tania Bruguera

Monday, February 9th, 2015

A group of artists including Tomma AbtsMarvin Gaye ChetwyndAnish Kapoor, and Jeremy Deller have issued a statement condemning Cuba’s treatment of artist Tania Bruguera, following her performance several weeks ago in Havana.  “In her work Tania Bruguera frequently addresses issues embedded in Cuba’s social, political and economic history. But her aim is not a question of direct political action but to open our eyes to the injustices and social issues in the world and to expose the mechanisms of power and protocol that shape human behavior,” the letter reads. (more…)

Cuban Government Monitoring Tania Bruguera, the Artist Claims

Friday, February 6th, 2015

Following her arrest over a performance in Havana, Tania Bruguera has claimed that Cuban authorities are closely following her every movement.  “I can move around Havana, but I have a car following me everywhere I go,” the artist tells the Miami New Times. “I know they are listening to my calls, because recently, during a phone conversation with a friend, I mentioned I was going to pass out fliers that the government might find alarming. Then, 20 minutes later, a government blogger wrote, ‘Tania is on her way to distribute inflammatory leaflets here.'”  (more…)

New York Times Looks at Artistic Freedoms in Cuba

Thursday, January 29th, 2015

The recent arrest of artist Tania Bruguera after her performance in Cuba has raised a number of questions regarding the freedom of artists in the country, the New York Times reports.  “You never know how far you can go,” says well-known novelist Leonardo Padura.  “Sometimes it seems as if spaces open and then close again.” (more…)

Tania Bruguera Freed in Cuba, Plans to Fight Detentions in Court

Monday, January 5th, 2015

Tania Bruguera, Tatlin’s Whisper VI, via Art NewspaperArtist Tania Bruguera has been freed following three consecutive detentions, and is planning to fight her imprisonment in both Cuba and at the UN.  “This served to unmask everyone,” Bruguera said in an interview. (more…)

Artist Tania Bruguera Arrested Over Protest Performance in Cuba

Wednesday, December 31st, 2014

Artist Tania Bruguera has been detained in Cuba, following the performance of an art piece designed to test the U.S.’s resolve to renew diplomatic ties with a country known for censoring free speech.  Bruguera was arrested as she walked towards Havana’s Revolution Square, and is currently being held by the government. (more…)

Lifted Embargo Has Collectors Rushing to Cuba

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

The New York Times notes the rush of interest by art buyers towards Cuba since President Obama lifted the economic embargo on the country earlier this month, with collectors fighting for first access to the country’s long-praised arts culture. “They’re saying, ‘I want to go before everyone else does,’ ” says dealer Alberto Magnan, who specializes in Cuban art. (more…)

Renewed U.S.-Cuba Relations May Signal Surge in Cuban Art Market

Monday, December 22nd, 2014

As the U.S. renews diplomatic relations with Cuba, critics and market leaders are predicting a new rush of interest in the island’s arts community.  “I believe Cuban art has been a best-kept secret among a few collectors,” says collector Howard Farber, “and now that Cuba is opening up to us I think more people will discover a genre that’s fresh and great.” (more…)

Bronx Museum in Talks for Show in Cuba Next Year

Monday, August 11th, 2014

The Bronx Museum is reportedly in talks with the organizers of next year’s Havana Biennial in Cuba to plan a possible exhibition during the event, which would make it the first major show by a US museum in the country.  The talks are also centered around a possible show of Cuban artists at the New York Museum. (more…)

Bloomberg Looks Inside Cuba’s Growing Arts Scene

Monday, June 16th, 2014

Bloomberg takes a look at the current arts community in Cuba, and its long, robust tradition of arts over the past century.  The article also goes on to discuss a loophole in the U.S. embargo which allowed America collectors to purchase artworks and prints under the classification of “informational material,” and which led to a surge in the market during the 1990’s.  “The arrival of foreign collectors sounded an alarm for the Cuban government,” says dealer Luis Miret Pérez. (more…)

New York – Los Carpinteros: “Irreversible” at Sean Kelly Through June 22nd, 2013

Saturday, June 22nd, 2013


Los Carpinteros, Tomates (2013), via Sean Kelly

Cuban artist collective Los Carpinteros are currently presenting a show of new and recent work at Sean Kelly’s Chelsea art space, pulling together a trio of projects that serve as a strong summary of the artists’ complex and multifaceted practice.


Los Carpinteros, Irreversible (Installation View), via Sean Kelly (more…)