Skip to content

USLAF Logo

  • About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • History
    • Press
  • Events
    • X as Intersection
    • Study Hall
  • Programs
    • Writing on Latinx Art
      • Previous CFPs
    • Latinx Artist Fellowship
    • Micro-Grants
      • Charla
      • CHISPA
      • Artist Mentorship Program
  • Contact
    • Newsletter
    • Email
Donate
USLAF Logo
  • About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • History
    • Press
  • Events
    • X as Intersection
    • Study Hall
  • Programs
    • Writing on Latinx Art
      • Previous CFPs
    • Latinx Artist Fellowship
    • Micro-Grants
      • Charla
      • CHISPA
      • Artist Mentorship Program
  • Contact
    • Newsletter
    • Email
Donate
USLAF Logo
Home Essays Migration

Topic: Migration

AllAbolitionAbstractionAfro-LatinxartesaníaAssemblageBlack AtlanticBlacknessBorderlandsBuilt EnvironmentCaliforniaCapitalismCaribbeanCeramicsChicanx ArtColombiaColonialismCraftCuban American ArtDecolonialityDiasporaDisplacementDominican American ArtEcologiesEmbodimentEnvironmental JusticeExileFeminismFiber artFilmGender-Based ViolenceGentrificationHairIndigeneityInstallation ArtLaborMaterialityMemoryMigrant ImaginariesMigrationMixed MediaMultidisciplinary artNepantlaNew MexicoNicaraguaNueva YorkNuyorican ArtPaintingPerformancePhotographypostcolonialPrintmakingPublic ArtPuerto Rican ArtPuerto RicoQueernessSacredSalvadoran American ArtSan AntonioSculptureSonoran DesertSoundSpiritualityState ViolenceTexasU.S.-Mexico BorderWorldmaking
A film still in black and white shows two feet in a pair of low-heeled white shoes against a desert landscape.

With All Her Belongings: The Diasporic Middle Ground in Maria Cristina (Tina) Tavera’s Zozobra

Jamie L. Ratliff

The Four Elements and Restorative Balance in Guadalupe Maravilla’s Disease Throwers

Kevin Cruz Amaya
Seven black baseball caps covered in shattered polarized glass are stacked on each other and hung vertically on a steel rod.

Presence in Absence: Verónica Gaona’s Spanning Worlds

Javier Arellano Vences
A person with brown skin pushes a cleaning cart in front of a colorful painting by Henri Matisse.

Redefining Maintenance Art through Migrant Imaginaries: Jay Lynn Gomez’s Aesthetics of Labor

María Eugenia López-García

Decolonial Gestures and Entangled Forms: Elia Alba’s Migratory Aesthetics

Benjamin Ogrodnik
USLAF Logo

US Latinx Art Forum, Inc. is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. Donations are tax-deductible. Federal Tax ID: 82-0698346

Copyright © 2026 - Designed by Cornershop Creative   Cornershop Creative logo