Latinx Artist Fellowship

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Francheska Alcántara

Interdisciplinary Visual Artist

Richmond, VA and The Bronx

https://francheskaalcantara.com/

Instagram @francheskaalcantarastudio

francheska.alcanta

@francheskaalcantarastudio

I investigate the material (sur)realities of urban detritus, often combining these found and fabricated objects in ritualistic baths of salt, sugar, soil, and dyes. Through these processes, I engage with the social connotations of precariousness, creativity, and the ritualistic nature of the everyday.

Francheska Alcántara is a queer Afro-Caribbean interdisciplinary artist raised by a village of people in community and based between Richmond, VA and The Bronx. Their work plays at the intersection of gesture, ritual, and myth within the Black diasporic imagination. Francheska reworks, repurposes, and transforms artifacts such as brown paper bags, Hispano cuaba soap, dominoes, and organic residues through sewing, folding, cutting, burning, and layering.

Francheska uses the subjective experiences of these artifacts or actions to interrogate how they create social meaning and cultural norms. These explorations point to slippages and resistance around colonial relations while expanding our capacity for pleasure, refusal, and liberation.

Alcántara holds an MFA in Sculpture + Extended Media from Virginia Commonwealth University (2019), a BFA in Painting from Hunter College (2015), and a BA in Art History from Old Dominion University. They have been a resident artist at LMCC’s Workspace (2024), Tulsa Artist Fellowship (2020-2023), MASS MoCA (2023), and Recess’ Session (2022). Alcántara is currently a Queer | Art Mentorship Fellow under the guidance of Liz Collins and serves as a faculty member at the University of Richmond.

Selected Works

"Starry Ocean I" uses embroidering techniques onto a paper bag, considering moods, improvisation, and sonic rhythms in oceanscapes and the passage of time encapsulated in action. The bag is dyed with blue and dark patches. Yellow, red, and blue thread embroider the bag with short lines and ‘x’ patterns. Yellow thread decorates the top edge of the bag and a white lace circle wraps around one of the handles.
Nine rectangular shaped objects sit in two rows on a flat table surface, one row of five on the left, and one row of four on the right. The objects are blue, red, and brown. Alcántara recreated Hispano cuaba soaps, a Caribbean household staple, using natural ingredients and rebranding them with terms like “Black,” “Negre,” and “Afro” on their surfaces to challenge the soap’s white-Eurocentric marketing.
"Tiger Jaw III" is a yellow organic-shaped object made of cuaba soap with a roughly circular pit-like dark scorched wooden center. The object is fairly flat and the yellow part is uneven and textured with flecks of dark material, creating some bumps and an uneven surface.