Talk with Juan Ricardo Rey Márquez: The Sounds of the Street in the Works of Fernell Franco.
Saturday, June 29 - 3 PM
Talk with Juan Ricardo Rey Márquez: The Sounds of the Street in the Works of Fernell Franco.

Andrés Caicedo proposes in his work "Liveforever" the existence of a debate between rock and salsa. However, more than a dichotomy, what was experienced during the 1970s and 1980s was a boom in popular culture in which music played a leading role. Hence, there are links between the arts in general with the everyday life of the streets and their sounds. This event aims to reconstruct some of these connections between music, literature, and visual arts.

Juan Ricardo Rey-Márquez (Bogotá, 1975):

Postdoctoral Fellow (CONICET, Argentina), PhD in History and Theory of Art (University of Buenos Aires), Master in Argentine and Latin American Art History from the Institute of Advanced Social Studies, National University of San Martín, Argentina. Researcher at the Center for Research in Art, Matter, and Culture MATERIA, Institute of Research in Art and Culture “Dr. Norberto Griffa”, National University of Tres de Febrero. His area of study is Hispanic American Art (16th-19th centuries), focusing on historiography and the epistemological dimension of drawing at the intersection of art and science. He teaches in the Master’s in Art Curatorship and the PhD in Comparative Theory of the Arts (UNTREF), the Degree in Art Management and History (USAL), and the Master’s in Argentine and Latin American Art History and Theory (EIDAES-UNSAM). He is the author of multiple publications in scientific journals, as well as presentations at national and international events. Rey-Márquez has published the following books: India, Santa, Americana Libertad. La transformación de una salvaje en un símbolo libertario (Buenos Aires, Bogotá: Unsam Edita, Editorial Universidad del Rosario, 2022); José Domingo Rodríguez. La Tranquila Expresión de una fe Revolucionaria (Bogotá: IDPC, 2021); along with Carolina Vanegas, Noticias iluminadas. Arte e identidad en el siglo XIX (Bogotá, FGAA, 2011); and El Dibujo en Colombia 1970 – 1986 (Medellín: La Carreta, 2007).