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 Public Art

Topic: Public Art

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 large metal sculpture resembling a tree stands within a park. From the top of the tree hang seven hundred small sculptures representing the stories of community members.

Árbol de la Vida: Memorias y Voces de la Tierra

Liz Kim

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

Kevin Cruz Amaya

Casa-Isla/House-Island: Edra Soto’s Reimagining of Insularity

Elizabeth Mirabal 

Postcommodity and the Latinx-Indigenous Continuum: Epistemic Resistance through Material, Form, and Sound

Jeanette Degollado
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