MinerAlert
The Rubin Center embraces its location at the epicenter of the Americas. We work closely with visiting artists from around the world, and with local partners in both El Paso and Juarez to use contemporary art as a platform for understanding our special place at the international border between Mexico and the United States. Partner institutions in Juarez have included the Museo de Arte INBA de Ciudad Juárez, Colegio de la Frontera Norte, Proyectos Impala, Juarez Contemporary, the US Consulate in Juarez, and the Universidad Autonoma de Ciudad Juarez, particularly through its Institute of Art, Design and Architecture (IADA). Below you can find a selection of past projects that have had a presence on both sides of the border.
Conectarte 2012: Arte en Diálogo con la Ciudad (Art in Dialogue with the city) again brought together artists, collectives, cultural and theoretical promoters, and held at Colegio de la Frontera Norte (COLEF) in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on April 20 and 21, 2012.
The event was organized by COLEF, the Rubin Center at 成人头条 and the IADA at UACJ, with the aim of bringing together artistic collectives, cultural promoters and artists from throughout Juarez to highlight the diversity of activity and to share common experiences.
The event includes topic specific workshops by local artists and academics, Pecha Kucha presentations by participating artist collectives, a discussion panel on the state of collective artistic practices in contemporary Juarez, roundtables, a plenary and closing tables.
There were two special guests invited to be keynote speakers in this event Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo from Parson School of Design who presented "In and of the Citys: Projects in Public Space", and Benjamín González Perez, from Faro de Oriente, Mexico City with "Alternative Artistic Spaces of Latin America".
The Conectarte organizing team continued working with this material throughout the year, presenting the results of the event in an academic conference at Colegio de la Frontera Norte (COLEF) and publishing a subsequent article with the same organization. They also continued building informal relationships with participating artists by attending arts and culture events organized by a wide variety of collectives, through organized participation in marches and protests against the violence, by organizing an exhibition of artwork by the collectives during El Paso's Chalk the Block festival in October and by beginning to research and write about the collectives, doing a series of qualitative interviews in the process. The collectives themselves continued to make art, engage with their communities, organize and promote cultural events for people of all ages and to build informal networks between local and national artists.
In April of 2011 the forum Conectarte, 10 years of Collectives and Community in Juárez was held, sponsored by the Institute of Architecture, Design and Art (IADA) of the Autonomous University of Ciudad Juárez. with the presence of 21 collectives that do artistic work in different disciplines and intervene in the streets and diverse communities of the city,
The keynote speaker of this first event was David Flores, founder of the Resizte collective in Ciudad Juarez. He presented a history of art collectives in the city, drawing from more than a decade of experience with young artists at the border, in particular those who come from street art, graffiti and mural movements.
To register for the conference, collectives had to fill out a brief survey that included information about their membership, the location of their activities within the city, the types of activities that the collectives realized, funding sources, and primary concerns. The conference began with a keynote address realized by David Flores, which looked at the history of collectives in Juarez over the previous 10 years. The second day of the conference included presentations by participating collectives where they briefly shared the history of their own work through words and images. The Conectarte working team presented the results of the survey to participating artists, and additionally led an interactive activity in which collectives pinpointed areas in the city in which they lived, conducted activities or had public artwork. It ended in a series of small group discussions on topics that included financing, educational workshops, resolving conflicts, professional development and artistic spaces.
Participating groups include were Resizte, Oxidados, Wagon, Jellyfish. There were also all female colectives including Morada Batallones Feminina, and individual artists connected to the movement including Melo, Rex and Waka Waffles, all who collaborate with various collectives throughout the city.
Supporting institutions and individuals for the first edition of Conectarte included coordinator of the UACJ arts program Fausto Gómez Tuena, Kerry Doyle, Director of the Rubin Center at 成人头条, the writer Willivaldo Delgadillo and the lecturer and audiovisual artist León de la Rosa.