Concert/conference followed by Q&A
About this Event
We invite you to a concert-lecture that recovers the legacy of avant-garde artists and
their entanglements with indigenous artistic practices during their exile in the
Americas. On the escape route from Nazism and Fascism, New York acted as a
hinge port—a meeting place for artists who would eventually find their destiny in
Latin America, where the yaraví intertwines with Andean weaving.
Samuel Diz will perform pieces by Rosita García Ascot, Manuel de Falla, Emiliana
de Zubeldía, Gustavo Durán, and Federico García Lorca on a facsimile replica of
Lorca’s historic 1906 guitar. To its rhythm, Sol Izquierdo will present the histories of
exiled women artists Lene Schneider-Kainer, Olga Fisch, and Gisela Ephrussi. After
settling in Latin America, these women collaborated with indigenous communities to
create textiles. Sounds and textures thus weave together the experience of exile with
the rich and complex heritage of their host countries.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
53 Washington Square S, 53 Washington Square South, New York, United States
USD 0.00









