ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Feminist Art Exhibition in Buenos Aires Explores Post-Pandemic World

exhibition · 2026-04-23

The exhibition 'Cuando cambia el mundo. Preguntas sobre arte y feminismo' at the Centro Cultural Kirchner in Buenos Aires, Argentina, curated by Andrea Giunta, presents works by five international artists: Aline Motta (Brazil), Esther Ferrer (Spain), Joiri Minaya (Dominican Republic/US), Pau Delgado Iglesias (Uruguay), and Sebastián Calfuqueo (Chile). The show, which opened on January 30 and runs until May 30, uses a feminist lens to examine identity, new realities, and the construction of a new sociability in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Giunta's curatorial text posits feminism as a critical matrix for rethinking how we understand the world, offering tools to comprehend contemporaneity and imagine futures. The artists' diverse reflections engage with contemporary feminist agendas, crossing disciplines to address gender issues, violence against women, the human relationship with nature, the legacies of slavery in Latin America, diasporas, and colonial and contemporary massacres. Admission is free with prior online booking.

Key facts

  • Exhibition 'Cuando cambia el mundo. Preguntas sobre arte y feminismo' at Centro Cultural Kirchner, Buenos Aires.
  • Curated by Andrea Giunta.
  • Features five international artists: Aline Motta, Esther Ferrer, Joiri Minaya, Pau Delgado Iglesias, Sebastián Calfuqueo.
  • Runs from January 30 to May 30.
  • Free admission with prior online booking.
  • Address: Sarmiento 151, C1041 Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Explores post-pandemic world, feminism, identity, and new sociability.
  • Artists address gender, violence, nature, slavery legacies, and diasporas.

Entities

Artists

  • Andrea Giunta
  • Aline Motta
  • Esther Ferrer
  • Joiri Minaya
  • Pau Delgado Iglesias
  • Sebastián Calfuqueo

Institutions

  • Centro Cultural Kirchner

Locations

  • Buenos Aires
  • Argentina
  • Brazil
  • Spain
  • Dominican Republic
  • United States
  • Uruguay
  • Chile

Sources