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Reading: Five Latinx Artists Explore Materiality, Identity, and Belonging in ‘Los Encuentros’ — Colossal
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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Five Latinx Artists Explore Materiality, Identity, and Belonging in ‘Los Encuentros’ — Colossal
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Five Latinx Artists Explore Materiality, Identity, and Belonging in ‘Los Encuentros’ — Colossal

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 23 July 2025 16:58
Published 23 July 2025
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Marfa sits at the crossroads of US-90 and US-67 in the expansive Chihuahua Desert of far West Texas. About 60 miles from Mexico, U.S. Border Patrol trucks are a common sight along the roads, in addition to an unmissable, otherworldly tethered surveillance blimp that hovers near the highway between the town center and one of its most iconic installations, Elmgreen & Dragset’s “Prada Marfa.”

As the current administration’s immigration policy has taken effect, the politics of identity and geography have again been thrust front and center—often violently. In this remote borderland, where the one-stoplight-town has been redefined by influential art world personalities for several decades in an idiosyncratic convergence of ideas and lifestyles, there is a unique opportunity to engage with themes of community, narrative, socio-economic realities, and a sense of place.

Justin Favela

Ballroom Marfa’s summer exhibition, Los Encuentros, gathers the work of Latinx artists Justin Favela, Ozzie Juarez, Antonio Lechuga, Narsiso Martinez, and Yvette Mayorga. The gallery describes an aim of the show, the title of which translates to “the meetings” or “the gatherings,” as “the representation of Latinx culture to confront the accessibility of art spaces, colonial art histories, the conditions of labor, and lived experience.”

Amid daily news reports of ICE raids around the nation, the work in Los Encuentros is a timely and provocative exploration of today’s societal complexities along with being a way of “responding to the experiences of the people and places they engage with and depict,” a statement says.

All the artists employ a wide range of materials and techniques, from Mayorga’s frosting-like, piped paint to Favela’s vibrant ruffled paper installations redolent of piñatas. Lechuga uses Mexican blankets, or cobijas, creating sewn textile collages that explore a wide range of experiences and perspectives amid the current political climate.

Martinez continues to create intimate, candid portraits of farm workers by using produce boxes, bags, and repurposed plastic as his substrates as a reminder of the often invisible labor that goes into putting food on Americans’ tables. And Juarez has completely transformed Ballroom’s facade in to a giant painting derived from ancient Mesoamerican motifs.

a large-scale assemblage portrait of three agricultural laborers on produce boxes, situated within drapes made of reclaimed plastic
Narsiso Martinez

Los Encuentros is curated by Texas-based Maggie Adler, who expressed delight at being able to collaborate “with artists whose practices center on allowing a broad range of community members to see themselves represented in art spaces.”

The show continues through October 12. Find more on the gallery’s website. And during open hours, keep an eye out for Rachel Hayes’ colorful patchwork flag that flies out front.

a long, horizontal painting featuring two figures standing on a suburban street surrounded by cartoonish animals
Ozzie Juarez
a vertical portrait of two men on an assemblage of kraft paper bags by Narsiso Martinez
Narsiso Martinez
an installation view of artworks in the exhibition 'Los Encuentros' at Ballroom Marfa
Justin Favela
a large-scale artwork installed at Ballroom Marfa, with three panels that wrap around the corners of the space
Antonio Lechuga
a detail of a large-scale artwork featuring the head of a bald eagle
Detail of a work by Antonio Lechuga
an installation view of artworks in the exhibition 'Los Encuentros' at Ballroom Marfa
Yvette Mayorga
a detail of a pink painting by Yvette Mayorga with thick application of paint
Detail of a work by Yvette Mayorga
an installation view of three large-scale paintings in a small white-walled gallery space
Antonio Lechuga
a detail of an artwork featuring a man holding a baby
Detail of a work by Antonio Lechuga
a detail of an artwork by Narsiso Martinez showing a young girl being detained by a masked man in uniform, drawn on farm produce boxes
Narsiso Martinez

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