Wednesday, July 22, 2026 | 5:00 – 7:00 PM
Location: Cuban Artists Fund Studio, 208 E 51st St, 2nd Floor, New York, NY (map)
Additional visits available by appointment. Please email info@residencyunlimited.org
Please join us on the occasion of RU artist Mari Claudia García’s Open Studio exhibition, featuring recently realized sculptural metal pieces from The Weight of Erasure series, exhibited for the first time. Mari Claudia will also present the video Liberty Is a Palimpsest and the participatory sound installation 11J or The Revolution That Never Happened (Second Iteration), offering an opportunity for live engagement with the audience through timed activations throughout the event.
Across sculpture, sound, installation, and material research, this locally based Cuban artist explores resistance as both a conceptual framework and an embodied condition. It is approached through processes of erasure, removal, and reconfiguration, in which material shifts become a way of thinking through change. Matter in states of tension—torn, ground, scratched, woven, molten—alongside processes of wear, fragmentation, and reorganization, extends an inquiry into historical, political, and affective conditions of pressure, while also suggesting ideas, actions, bodies, and forms that persist through such conditions.
About
Mari Claudia García is a U.S.-based multidisciplinary artist and educator working at the intersection of art and politics. Her practice is grounded in a socio-political exploration of communication and language as shaped by power dynamics and political structures. She is interested in tensions surrounding political correctness and “cancel culture.” In recent years, her research has focused on censorship and protest, examining their interrelations across both authoritarian regimes and democracies.
García engages with archival material, elements of popular culture, and references drawn from public space, moving between abstraction and material rawness to transform these sources into signifiers within her work. She is particularly drawn to process-based methodologies, where making processes—including their performative dimension—are integral to her practice.
This program benefits from the support of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the Cuban Artists Fund.
