Studio Lenca
Latino previously undocumented in the USA
From El Salvador 🇸🇻 currently UK 🇬🇧

David Castillo is proud to announce its representation of @studiolenca in North America. The artist’s practice explores identity, migration, and belonging through a displaced, mixed Indigenous lens, drawing on personal history. Studio Lenca’s work reclaims fragmented and often erased narratives. Joy and belonging are positioned as radical acts rooted in lived experience and ancestral knowledge. His solo exhibition is currently on view at the gallery, with recent press for the exhibition in @galeriemagazine @artnews @juxtapozmag @ocula.art @friezeofficial @theartnewspaper.official @whitewall.art and @cultured_mag The artist’s work is also currently on view at MoMA PS1 in La Escuela: Education as Resistance and Rubell Museum, Miami.
The gallery has long contextualized artists whose work address the prevailing narratives within culture to challenge histories. Studio Lenca’s work is an integral part of the broader conversations the gallery has nurtured for over two decades. David Castillo’s emphasis on history, art history, and beauty seeks to constantly enhance cultural legacies.
Studio Lenca was born in La Paz, El Salvador (1986) and lives in Margate, UK, where he works at Tracey Emin Studios. He received his MA from Goldsmiths University of London and has had solo exhibitions in Miami, New York, Hong Kong, London, Bangkok, Seoul, Dubai, among others. His work has been included in group exhibitions including El Museo del Barrio, New York and Hauser & Wirth, London. Upcoming commissions include Un-Monument | Re-Monument | De-Monument: Transforming Boston; recent commissions include Hermes, London. His work is in public collections including Rubell Museum; Parrish Art Museum; Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art; and PAMM among others.
Image 1: Studio Lenca, photo by Marc Hibbert
Image 2: Studio Lenca, Flor, 2025, Oil and acrylic on canvas, 100 x 100 cm
Image 3: Studio Lenca, Rutas (detail), 2025 in “La Escuela: Education as Resistance” at MoMA PS1
#studiolenca #histories #narratives #belonging joy ancestral context convesation legacies painting sculpture installation community davidcastillo #davidcastillogallery

David Castillo is proud to announce its representation of @studiolenca in North America. The artist’s practice explores identity, migration, and belonging through a displaced, mixed Indigenous lens, drawing on personal history. Studio Lenca’s work reclaims fragmented and often erased narratives. Joy and belonging are positioned as radical acts rooted in lived experience and ancestral knowledge. His solo exhibition is currently on view at the gallery, with recent press for the exhibition in @galeriemagazine @artnews @juxtapozmag @ocula.art @friezeofficial @theartnewspaper.official @whitewall.art and @cultured_mag The artist’s work is also currently on view at MoMA PS1 in La Escuela: Education as Resistance and Rubell Museum, Miami.
The gallery has long contextualized artists whose work address the prevailing narratives within culture to challenge histories. Studio Lenca’s work is an integral part of the broader conversations the gallery has nurtured for over two decades. David Castillo’s emphasis on history, art history, and beauty seeks to constantly enhance cultural legacies.
Studio Lenca was born in La Paz, El Salvador (1986) and lives in Margate, UK, where he works at Tracey Emin Studios. He received his MA from Goldsmiths University of London and has had solo exhibitions in Miami, New York, Hong Kong, London, Bangkok, Seoul, Dubai, among others. His work has been included in group exhibitions including El Museo del Barrio, New York and Hauser & Wirth, London. Upcoming commissions include Un-Monument | Re-Monument | De-Monument: Transforming Boston; recent commissions include Hermes, London. His work is in public collections including Rubell Museum; Parrish Art Museum; Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art; and PAMM among others.
Image 1: Studio Lenca, photo by Marc Hibbert
Image 2: Studio Lenca, Flor, 2025, Oil and acrylic on canvas, 100 x 100 cm
Image 3: Studio Lenca, Rutas (detail), 2025 in “La Escuela: Education as Resistance” at MoMA PS1
#studiolenca #histories #narratives #belonging joy ancestral context convesation legacies painting sculpture installation community davidcastillo #davidcastillogallery

David Castillo is proud to announce its representation of @studiolenca in North America. The artist’s practice explores identity, migration, and belonging through a displaced, mixed Indigenous lens, drawing on personal history. Studio Lenca’s work reclaims fragmented and often erased narratives. Joy and belonging are positioned as radical acts rooted in lived experience and ancestral knowledge. His solo exhibition is currently on view at the gallery, with recent press for the exhibition in @galeriemagazine @artnews @juxtapozmag @ocula.art @friezeofficial @theartnewspaper.official @whitewall.art and @cultured_mag The artist’s work is also currently on view at MoMA PS1 in La Escuela: Education as Resistance and Rubell Museum, Miami.
The gallery has long contextualized artists whose work address the prevailing narratives within culture to challenge histories. Studio Lenca’s work is an integral part of the broader conversations the gallery has nurtured for over two decades. David Castillo’s emphasis on history, art history, and beauty seeks to constantly enhance cultural legacies.
Studio Lenca was born in La Paz, El Salvador (1986) and lives in Margate, UK, where he works at Tracey Emin Studios. He received his MA from Goldsmiths University of London and has had solo exhibitions in Miami, New York, Hong Kong, London, Bangkok, Seoul, Dubai, among others. His work has been included in group exhibitions including El Museo del Barrio, New York and Hauser & Wirth, London. Upcoming commissions include Un-Monument | Re-Monument | De-Monument: Transforming Boston; recent commissions include Hermes, London. His work is in public collections including Rubell Museum; Parrish Art Museum; Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art; and PAMM among others.
Image 1: Studio Lenca, photo by Marc Hibbert
Image 2: Studio Lenca, Flor, 2025, Oil and acrylic on canvas, 100 x 100 cm
Image 3: Studio Lenca, Rutas (detail), 2025 in “La Escuela: Education as Resistance” at MoMA PS1
#studiolenca #histories #narratives #belonging joy ancestral context convesation legacies painting sculpture installation community davidcastillo #davidcastillogallery
In MoMA PS1’s Homeroom, @StudioLenca recently led “Rutas.” Lenca has historically facilitated “Rutas” painting workshops as spaces for displaced individuals to document their experiences moving through both land and feelings. In this iteration of “Rutas”, the artist collaborated with local teens from @glasswingi, each of whom contributed a painting narrating their unique story. Collectively, these works form an archive of displacement and resilience.
Presented as part of an exhibition by @laescuela.art, “Education as Resistance” foregrounds education as an artistic practice and a space for dialogue, reflection, and collective making.
Link in bio to plan your visit to experience this project, which underscores education as social practice. 👉 Admission is free for all!
🎵: a Marea / Circus Marcus by Independent Music Licensing Collective (IMLC), Free Music Archive, CC BY-NC-ND

Monuments, 2024, Paper, blankets and found materials, variable dimensions

Monuments, 2024, Paper, blankets and found materials, variable dimensions

Monuments, 2024, Paper, blankets and found materials, variable dimensions

Monuments, 2024, Paper, blankets and found materials, variable dimensions

Monuments, 2024, Paper, blankets and found materials, variable dimensions

Monuments, 2024, Paper, blankets and found materials, variable dimensions

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes
The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

The making of ‘Libertad’ 2025 at Counter Editions print studio. I love translating my paintings into different materials and processes

Dreamland (2024) Three mobile papier-mâché volcanoes.
Made in collaboration with young asylum seekers from Kent Refuge Action Network.
Dreamland (2024) Three mobile papier-mâché volcanoes.
Made in collaboration with young asylum seekers from Kent Refuge Action Network.

Dreamland (2024) Three mobile papier-mâché volcanoes.
Made in collaboration with young asylum seekers from Kent Refuge Action Network.

Dreamland (2024) Three mobile papier-mâché volcanoes.
Made in collaboration with young asylum seekers from Kent Refuge Action Network.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.

For the first time, my family in El Salvador got to see my paintings. The first pic is them at the exhibition (:
And over four days, 2,000 people came through. I didn’t expect that at all.
All the different parts of me aligned.
Thank you to everyone who made this possible.
Il Visualizzatore Storie Instagram è uno strumento facile da usare che ti permette di guardare e salvare le storie, video, foto o IGTV di Instagram in modo segreto. Con questo servizio puoi scaricare contenuti e goderteli offline ogni volta che vuoi. Se trovi qualcosa di interessante su Instagram che vorresti rivedere più tardi o vuoi vedere le storie restando anonimo, il nostro Visualizzatore è perfetto per te. Anonstories offre una soluzione eccellente per mantenere la tua identità nascosta. Instagram ha lanciato per la prima volta la funzionalità Storie nell'agosto 2023, che è stata rapidamente adottata da altre piattaforme per il suo formato coinvolgente e tempestivo. Le storie permettono agli utenti di condividere aggiornamenti rapidi, che siano foto, video o selfie, arricchiti con testo, emoji o filtri, e sono visibili per solo 24 ore. Questo limite di tempo crea un forte coinvolgimento rispetto ai post normali. Oggi, le storie sono uno dei modi più popolari per connettersi e comunicare sui social media. Tuttavia, quando guardi una storia, il creatore può vedere il tuo nome nella loro lista di visualizzatori, il che potrebbe essere un problema per la privacy. E se desiderassi navigare tra le storie senza essere notato? Ecco dove Anonstories diventa utile. Ti consente di guardare contenuti pubblici su Instagram senza rivelare la tua identità. Basta inserire il nome utente del profilo che ti interessa e lo strumento mostrerà le sue ultime storie. Funzionalità del Visualizzatore Anonstories: - Navigazione Anonima: Guarda le storie senza apparire nella lista di visualizzazione. - Nessun Account Necessario: Visualizza contenuti pubblici senza registrarti su Instagram. - Download dei Contenuti: Salva qualsiasi contenuto delle storie direttamente sul tuo dispositivo per un uso offline. - Guarda i Punti Salienti: Accedi ai punti salienti di Instagram, anche oltre la finestra di 24 ore. - Monitoraggio dei Repost: Tieni traccia dei repost o dei livelli di interazione nelle storie per i profili personali. Limitazioni: - Questo strumento funziona solo con account pubblici; gli account privati restano inaccessibili. Vantaggi: - Privacy: Guarda qualsiasi contenuto su Instagram senza essere notato. - Semplice e Facile: Nessuna installazione di app o registrazione richiesta. - Strumenti Esclusivi: Scarica e gestisci contenuti in modi che Instagram non offre.
Segui gli aggiornamenti di Instagram discretamente proteggendo la tua privacy e restando anonimo.
Guarda profili e foto in modo anonimo facilmente usando il Visualizzatore di profili privati.
Questo strumento gratuito ti permette di visualizzare le storie di Instagram in modo anonimo, garantendo che la tua attività rimanga nascosta dall'utente che carica la storia.
Anonstories consente agli utenti di guardare le storie di Instagram senza avvisare il creatore.
Funziona senza problemi su iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e browser moderni come Chrome e Safari.
Garantisce una navigazione sicura e anonima senza richiedere credenziali di accesso.
Gli utenti possono visualizzare storie pubbliche semplicemente inserendo un nome utente—nessun account richiesto.
Scarica foto (JPEG) e video (MP4) facilmente.
Il servizio è gratuito.
Il contenuto degli account privati è accessibile solo ai follower.
I file sono destinati solo a uso personale o educativo e devono rispettare le normative sul copyright.
Inserisci un nome utente pubblico per visualizzare o scaricare storie. Il servizio genera link diretti per salvare i contenuti localmente.