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Karla Zuniga Pach | El Santo contra los escépticos en materia de mitos, 2025
Drypoint
Media Dimensions: 66.4 x 91.1 cm
Image Dimensions: 61.4 x 86.1 cm
Edition of 3
Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £200.00.
Karla Zúñiga Pach is an artist from Mexico City, currently based in London. Her work centers on etching and lithography, often incorporating mixed media. She explores how printmaking can make information accessible and create connections across time and place. She trained as a printer at Parsons, The New School for Design in New York City and is about to finish her master’s degree at the Royal College of Art, which gives her a strong understanding of the technical possibilities of print and its role as a powerful tool for artistic expression and social engagement. She views print as an important space for reclaiming and reinterpreting its historical function, one that not only spreads ideas but also encourages critical thinking and reflection. She is interested in how print can merge the literal with the abstract, sparking conversations that cross borders and challenge dominant narratives. Her work aims to affirm and explore Latin American identity in the present, considering the various social and cultural contexts that shape it. She has a particular interest in movements of cultural resistance and the subcultures that have developed throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. She also considers the lasting impact of pop culture and globalization on cultural codes, seeking to connect personal stories with larger cultural discussions and create spaces for collective reflection.
Drypoint
Media Dimensions: 66.4 x 91.1 cm
Image Dimensions: 61.4 x 86.1 cm
Edition of 3
Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £200.00.
Karla Zúñiga Pach is an artist from Mexico City, currently based in London. Her work centers on etching and lithography, often incorporating mixed media. She explores how printmaking can make information accessible and create connections across time and place. She trained as a printer at Parsons, The New School for Design in New York City and is about to finish her master’s degree at the Royal College of Art, which gives her a strong understanding of the technical possibilities of print and its role as a powerful tool for artistic expression and social engagement. She views print as an important space for reclaiming and reinterpreting its historical function, one that not only spreads ideas but also encourages critical thinking and reflection. She is interested in how print can merge the literal with the abstract, sparking conversations that cross borders and challenge dominant narratives. Her work aims to affirm and explore Latin American identity in the present, considering the various social and cultural contexts that shape it. She has a particular interest in movements of cultural resistance and the subcultures that have developed throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. She also considers the lasting impact of pop culture and globalization on cultural codes, seeking to connect personal stories with larger cultural discussions and create spaces for collective reflection.