The exhibition included three paintings by Fernando do Campo that are part of a series about the flight patterns—real and imagined—of house sparrows, a species introduced to the New York City area between 1850 and 1870.
Midtown Offices, New York
In 2018 CMAA partnered with a financial corporation to organize an exhibition in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month. Installed throughout the company’s Midtown offices, Mapping Experience: Contemporary Art by Hispanic Artists in New York featured the work of Gabriel Barcia-Colombo, Cristina Camacho, Darlene Carnecho, Lucia Fainzilber and Evan Venegas. Shown here, Document of Events II (2015) by Fernando do Campo.


Left to right: Fernando do Campo Document of Event I and Introduced Species in Landscape, 2015. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery

Lucia Fainzilber, Untitled 1 & 2 — Somewear Series, 2014. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery

Lucia Fainzilber, Untitled 2 — Somewear Series, 2014. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery

Left to right: Fernando do Campo, Eight Brooklyn Birds, 2015, and Cristina Camacho, Olivia, 2016. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery

Gabriel Barcia-Colombo, A Point Just Passed, 2011Courtesy of Muriel Guépin Gallery

Gabriel Barcia-Colombo, A Point Just Passed, 2011Courtesy of Muriel Guépin Gallery

Gabriel Barcia-Colombo, A Point Just Passed, 2011Courtesy of Muriel Guépin Gallery

Gabriel Barcia-Colombo, A Point Just Passed, 2011Courtesy of Muriel Guépin Gallery

Far left and far right: Cristina Camacho, Grace and Tomas, 2016. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery. Center: Evan Venegas, Day Map 1218, 2018. Courtesy of Muriel Guépin Gallery

Darlene Charneco, Islands and Other Experiments, 2010. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery

Darlene Charneco, Islands and Other Experiments, 2010. Courtesy of Praxis Gallery
Photography: Timothy Doyon