ISCP Talk
September 23, 2025, 6:30–7:30pm

Artists at Work: Anaïs Horn in Conversation with Wendy Vogel

For this Artists at Work, ISCP artist-in-residence Anaïs Horn will be joined by writer and curator Wendy Vogel. Horn will present on her practice and speak with Vogel, who has contributed texts to several of Horn’s projects, about collaborative processes, spectral presences, book-making, and the intertwining of feminist narratives with biographical and autobiographical themes. They will also discuss Horn’s multidisciplinary approaches across image, text, sound, and installation.

Anaïs Horn is an Austrian artist based in Paris and Lunigiana, Italy whose multidisciplinary practice explores the tension between presence and absence, tracing how memories and (her)stories resonate through the spectral presence of objects and spaces. Horn frequently introduces elements of illusion and mystery, situating her work within the space of the in-between. In 2022 she co-founded the publishing house Drama Books, and in 2023, she co-founded the artist-run space Cabanon in Paris. Recent solo and two-person presentations include Camera Austria, Graz; Fotohof, Salzburg, Austria; MLZ Art Dep, Trieste; Galeria RGR, Mexico City; Sophie Tappeiner, Vienna; NADA Projects, New York; and her upcoming exhibitions include National Library of Kosovo, Pristina and Austrian Cultural Forum New York. Monographs of her work have been published by DCV, Berlin; Meta/Books, Amsterdam; Edition Camera Austria, Graz; Edition Fotohof, Salzburg, and Drama Books, Paris.

Wendy Vogel is a writer and critic and occasional curator based in Brooklyn. Vogel’s research interests include legacies of feminist and identity-based practice, as well as the performative and ethical questions around contemporary art production and criticism. A former editor at Flash Art International, Modern Painters and Art in America, she has contributed to art-agenda, Art Review, BOMB, Brooklyn Rail, frieze, Kaleidoscope, Mousse and The New York Times, among other publications. Vogel has organized or co-organized curatorial projects at venues including the Hessel Museum at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Künstlerhaus Schloss Balmoral, Bad Ems, Germany; The Kitchen, New York; and Abrons Arts Center, New York.

This program is supported by Federal Ministry for Arts, Culture, Civil Service and Sport of Austria; Styrian Provincial Government Department 9 Culture, Europe, Sports; Hartfield Foundation; James Rosenquist Foundation; Joe Sultan; Lèna Saltos; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; New York City Council District 34; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; Dr. Samar Maziad; Sarah Jones; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; William Talbott Hillman Foundation; and Woodman Family Foundation.

6:30–7:30pm

Participating Residents

Offsite Project
September 19–November 22, 2025

Charlie Perez-Tlatenchi: Triumphant Currents, Auspicious Winds

Join us for the Opening Reception on Friday, September 19, from 6–8pm at Canal Projects, 351 Canal Street, New York.

The International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP) and Canal Projects present Charlie Perez-Tlatenchi: Triumphant Currents, Auspicious Winds, the artist’s most ambitious public art installation to date. Activating the windows of Canal Projects along Canal Street and Wooster Street, Perez-Tlatenchi’s eleven-panel mural and three-channel video weave together imagery from urban environments, religious iconography, and the commercial vernacular that reflect on obscured colonial histories and diasporic narratives.

Informed by his experience growing up in the Mexican and Chinese communities of Brooklyn’s Sunset Park, Perez-Tlatenchi creates collages layered with cultural references from immigrant neighborhoods like his own. He finds inspiration in advertisements and borrows from commercial printing techniques and materials, including perforated vinyl found on convenience store windows and lenticular prints used for signage.

In Triumphant Currents, Auspicious Winds, vibrant landscapes and motifs—some drawn from the artist’s extensive travel photography, and others from Catholic prayer cards and related religious sources—intersect across a series of disorienting vignettes. Digitally composed, these scenes feature images of Mexico’s Popocatépetl volcano, Hong Kong’s historic Tamão settlement hills on Lantau Island, and the rolling, sun-bleached Judean desert between Bethlehem and Jericho, places that once linked the Mexican and Chinese empires in the earliest global trade system known as the Manila Galleon Trade. The artist also incorporates archetypes such as the Seven Swords of the Archangels, Holy Fire, Archangel Michael holding the scales of justice, and the sea goddess Mazu, as well as a deconstructed maritime scene that alludes to the Biblical flood myth and water as signs of both divine judgment and historical erasure. 

Made with perforated vinyl that requires light for it to be fully visible, the mural gradually becomes transparent as day shifts to night. At sunset, the Canal Street windows reveal a three-channel video that transforms the work into a moving tapestry of footage from colonial sites of the former Spanish empire—from the Americas and Europe to its Asian trading outposts. Perez-Tlatenchi renders colonial histories as a persistent cyclical presence in contemporary life. The monitors’ illuminated imagery enters into direct conversation with Canal Street, one of New York City’s many definitive sites of commercial exchange. Through a constellation of images, Perez-Tlatenchi invokes narratives of conquest, trade, and exploitation that are still embedded in the cultural fabric of the city today. At a time when deglobalization re-enforces borders, this work insists that distinct cultures and their histories are fundamentally entangled. 

Charlie Perez-Tlatenchi (b. 1994, Brooklyn) is a New York-based artist who has presented his work in solo exhibitions at Window Unit, South Orange, New Jersey (2023) and haul gallery, Brooklyn, NY (2021). He has also participated in group exhibitions, including the Macau Biennial, China (2025); Below Grand, New York (2025); Academy Art Museum, Easton, Maryland (2023); Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York (2022); Elizabeth Leach Gallery, Portland, Oregon (2018); and Canada Gallery, New York (2017), among other institutions. Perez-Tlatenchi is a 2025 recipient of The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund Residency at ISCP. 

Charlie Perez-Tlatenchi: Triumphant Currents, Auspicious Winds is co-organized by the International Studio & Curatorial Program and Canal Projects. The exhibition is curated by Melinda Lang, ISCP’s Director of Programs and Exhibitions, with Veronica Sanchez, ISCP’s Programs Coordinator. 

This project is supported by The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; Hartfield Foundation; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; New York City Council District 34; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; James Rosenquist Foundation; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; and William Talbott Hillman Foundation.

About Canal Projects
Canal Projects is a non-profit contemporary art institution dedicated to supporting international and local artists at pivotal moments in their careers.

Canal Projects is generously supported by the YS Kim Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization that provides general support grants and implements innovative programs to help underrepresented and emerging artists and their communities thrive. YS Kim Foundation envisions a world where people and communities grow and flourish with culture, creativity, opportunities, and connection. Its mission is to support, mobilize, and open new pathways of success for artists, children, young leaders, communities, and organizations. It does this by starting new initiatives and providing grants and scholarships to organizations and students.

Participating Residents