Aimé Iglesias Lukin is an art historian and curator. Born and raised in Buenos Aires, she has lived in New York since 2011. Her PhD in art history from Rutgers University, titled "This Must Be the Place: Latin American Artists in New York 1965-1975", became an exhibition in Americas Society in 2021. She completed her master's degree at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University and his undergraduate studies in art history at the University of Buenos Aires. She has been an independent curator of exhibitions in museums and cultural centers, and previously worked in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Institute of Latin American Art Studies, and the Proa Foundation of Buenos Aires. She is currently the Director of the Americas Society of Visual Arts in New York.
Viña del Mar, Chile, 1989. She is an art historian and curator. She researches, writes and exhibits on Chilean and Latin American art. She is the author of the book "Álvaro Guevara. La tela, el papel y el cuadrilátero" (Mundana Ediciones, 2019), co-editor of the independent label Ediciones JGV and, since 2016, professor at the Art Institute of the PUCV.
PhD in Philosophy, Master in Theory and History of Art and Journalist from the Universidad de Chile. Her areas of research are art literature; art criticism; writings on art in Chile; and the relationships between image and writing. She has published books such as Luces Equidistantes. Enrique Lihn y las artes visuales (2022), Crítica situada. La escritura de Enrique Lihn sobre las artes visuales (2004) and La deriva líquida del ojo. Ensayos sobre la obra de Alfredo Jaar (2017)
Writer and visual arts researcher. She studied Design at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso (PUCV) and Aesthetics at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (PUC). She completed a Masters in Creative Writing at New York University (NYU). She worked as a cultural editor for different print media, such as Viernes magazine, ED magazine and Paula. She is pursuing a PhD in Arts at PUC, where she researches the relationship between performance and gender.