
Installation view of Violaciones Domésticas: Feminist Constellations in 1990s Argentina, Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA), 2025. Photo: Marc Tatti
Saturday, December 13
12 PM
Register
Learn more about our current exhibitions during monthly guided tours with members of our curatorial staff. Clara Prat-Gay, curatorial assistant, will lead a tour of Marcia Schvartz: Power in Looking Back, followed by a tour of Violaciones Domésticas: Feminist Constellations in 1990s Argentina, led by Starasea Camara, curatorial and public engagement assistant.
Tours will be in English and held at ISLAA, located at 142 Franklin Street in Tribeca. Due to limited capacity, advance registration is encouraged. Please email islaa.exhibitions@islaa.org with any questions about this event.
About the Speakers
Starasea Nidiala Camara is a curator and scholar whose practice centers Black cultural and artistic production throughout the Americas. She is currently the curatorial and public engagement assistant at the Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA) and a nominated fellow in the second cohort of the Early Stage Art Professionals Fellowship with the A&L Berg Foundation. She has previously held positions with the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Emerging Curators Institute, Souls Grown Deep Foundation, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Museum of Modern Art. Camara’s curatorial projects include In the Presence of Our Ancestors: Southern Perspectives in African American Art at the Minneapolis Institute of Art (2020), and Whiles I Yet Live: Matriarchy and Generational Exchange in Gee’s Bend at the National Quilt Museum (2025). Recently, her writing has been featured in the publications Meaning Matter Memory: Selections from the Studio Museum in Harlem and the 36th Bienal de São Paulo catalogue, Not All Travelers Walk Roads—Of Humanity as Practice.
Clara Prat-Gay is a New York–based art researcher, curator, and writer. She has held curatorial and editorial positions at museums, galleries, and non-profit institutions, including the Swiss Institute in New York and the Buenos Aires City Government’s Ministry of Culture. She earned an MA in curatorial studies from Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies and currently serves as curatorial assistant at the Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA).