cv press links contact
trans
press  
barra
       
Now part of the Museum Of Latin American Art Collection
New Works
Statement
Art Circuir Magazine / Lower Wynwood Arts District, Miami – April 2011
Upcoming Solo Show @ Galeria Almeida Dale, Sao Paulo
Absolut Network America
Interview
Interview
Artist's Statement
Updated Resume
Sobre Muñecos, Dualidades y Temores / by Andres gaitan Tobar, Critic.
Recent Group Exhibitions
The Black Magic Art of Mariana Monteagudo, NARCISSUS MIRROR SOLO SHOW
Narcissus's Mirror / El Espejo de Narciso Mariana Monteagudo
 
 
trans
27.11.2011
Now part of the Museum Of Latin American Art Collection
california, USA

 


Now part of the Museum Of Latin American Art Collection, I'm so excited!!!

"Amarilla" 2004 es ahora parte de la colección del MOLAA



the piece "Amarilla" 2004 was purchased by MOLAA’s founder, Dr. Robert Gumbiner and is now in his private collection which is on permanent loan to the museum.



MUSEUM OF LATIN AMERICAN ART

628 Alamitos Ave Long Beach, CA 90802

www.molaa.org



MOLAA is exclusively dedicated to modern and contemporary Latin American art.



The Museum of Latin American Art educates the public through the collection, preservation, presentation and interpretation of modern and contemporary Latin American art in order to promote cross-cultural dialogue.

History



The Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA) was founded in 1996 in Long Beach, California and serves the greater Los Angeles area. MOLAA is the only museum in the United States exclusively dedicated to modern and contemporary Latin American art. Since its inception, MOLAA has doubled its size, added a 15,000 sq. ft. sculpture garden and expanded its permanent collection, ranging from works by Tamayo and Matta to Cruz-Diez, Los Carpinteros and Tunga.



The museum is located in the city’s rapidly developing East Village Arts District. Between 1913 and 1918 the site that the museum now occupies was the home of the Balboa Amusement Producing Company, then the World’s most productive and innovative silent film studio. Before there was a Hollywood, Balboa was the king of the silver screen, producing as much as 20,000 feet of negative film a week.



The building that was renovated as MOLAA’s Entertainment / Education / Special Event venue may have been part of the old Balboa film studio. MOLAA’s exhibition galleries, administrative offices and store are housed in what was once a roller skating rink known as the Hippodrome. Built in the late 1920s, after the film studios were gone, the Hippodrome was a haven for skaters for four decades. The building then served as a senior health center for fifteen years. The high vaulted ceilings and beautiful wooden floors were perfectly suited for the Hippodrome's final metamorphosis into the Museum of Latin American Art.