Skip to main content
Vilcek Foundation
  • About
    • About

      The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation of the arts and sciences.

    • Our Mission
    • Our Founders
    • Our Team
    • Press Center
    • Contact
  • Prizes
    • Prizes

      The Vilcek Foundation Prizes celebrate extraordinary achievements in the arts and sciences.

    • About the Prizes
    • Prize Recipients
    • Vilcek Prizes

      Awards immigrants with a legacy of major accomplishments.

    • Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise

      Recognizes young immigrant professionals for outstanding achievements.

    • Vilcek Prize for Excellence

      Celebrating intellectual and cultural leaders in the United States.

    • Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History

      Honors art historians, curators, and fine arts professionals.

  • Art
  • Grants
    • Grants

      Grants awarded to 501(c)(3) cultural, educational, and philanthropic organizations in the United States.

    • Grants

      Learn more and apply for a grant.

    • Grants History

      Explore a list of past Vilcek Foundation grantees.

  • Events
  • News
Sign Up Search
Home > News > Aimé Iglesias Lukin: Building Connections Through Art

Aimé Iglesias Lukin: Building Connections Through Art

News | February 3, 2025
Tags
art art curation art history curator curatorial work
Download audio
Audio: Listen to this post
Share this page
Share this page on X Share this page on Facebook Share this page on LinkedIn
Aimé standing in a New York City crosswalk, smiling with city traffic behind her.

As an art historian and curator, Aimé Iglesias Lukin focuses on bridging the scholarly and the experimental. Her projects are built on the intention to open a space to present the diversity and richness of identities for audiences to immerse themselves in, feel represented by, and learn from. 

“Images have the capacity to pose ideas that are beyond the limitations of words. We as curators must present art objects in a way that unlocks their potential to incite new questions.”

Aimé leans against a gallery wall with two large artworks visible behind her.
Aimé Iglesias Lukin in the gallery at the Americas Society/Council of the Americas (AS/COA).

For her leadership on the art of the Americas, and her focused initiatives to achieve recognition for historically underrepresented Latin and women artists, Iglesias Lukin is the recipient of a 2025 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Curatorial Work. 

A Lifelong Passion for Art and Museums 

Aimé Iglesias Lukin decided she wanted to become an art historian when she was just 14 years old. Lukin was on her very first trip outside of Argentina, visiting the Art Institute of Chicago, when she had a “eureka moment.” 

Aimé has a discussion with three of her colleagues as they sit at a meeting table with a large bookcase behind them.
Aimé Iglesias Lukin working with her colleagues at AS/COA.

Viewing Claude Monet’s impressionist masterpiece Stack of Wheat, she instantly remembered a school assignment she had written two years earlier largely based on materials found in an encyclopedia in her local library. Seeing the impressionist brushstroke connected it all. She walked out of the building and told her family she wanted to work in a museum when she grew up.

Aimé standing next to an empty fireplace and leaning on the wall.

After earning her bachelor’s degree at the University of Buenos Aires, she made the decision to pursue further education in the United States. The lack of a fellowship or a student visa delayed her immigration process, but she was able to obtain a work permit and begin her studies in New York in 2013. She went on to earn her Master’s in Art History and Archaeology at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University and her PhD at Rutgers University.

Drawing connections: Past, present, and futures

As the director and chief curator of art at the Americas Society, Lukin aims to build projects that construct visual narratives of past and present culture, and prompt dialogue and community connections.

Aimé and two of her colleagues pictured next to an artwork in a gallery.
Aimé Iglesias Lukin and her colleagues in the gallery at AS/COS.

Her first major exhibition for the Americas Society, This Must Be the Place: Latin American Artists in New York 1965-1975, was held in 2021-2022 and was accompanied by a monograph. The exhibition brought together a broad array of experimental work and archival materials by artists whose work arrived at a pivotal point for reckoning with race and gender in contemporary art, and whose experiments in media expanded ideas of American art turning New York into a global art center. 

Aimé standing in front of an ornate wooden banister.

Subsequent exhibitions included the first U.S. solo show of Brazilian artist Bispo Do Rosario, which drew attention to outsider art in a global context, race, and institutionalization, and El Dorado: Myths of Gold, developed in partnership with the Fundación Proa in Argentina and the Museo Amparo in Mexico. 

“Being a migrant curator gives me a particular adaptability and a more relational sense of self, with an enhanced valuation of creating and caring for community at the lack of traditional family nearby,” says Lukin. “My attempts at my work to create horizontality and more space at the level of curatorial work, inclusion of more diverse artists, and to bring in new and broader audiences, is a result of that need to create community and more open views of identity.”

Tags
art art curation art history curator curatorial work
Share this page
Share this page on X Share this page on Facebook Share this page on LinkedIn

Related News

February 3, 2025

Vilcek Foundation Awards $250,000 in Prizes to Immigrant Curators

The Vilcek Foundation awards $250,000 in prizes to immigrant curators Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Donna Honarpisheh, Aimé Iglesias Lukin, and Bernardo Mosqueira with the 2025 Vilcek Foundation Prizes in Curatorial Work.
Four diagonal splices featuring portraits of Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Donna Honarpisheh, Aime Iglesias Lukin, and Bernardo Mosqueira, against a red background.
February 3, 2025

Oluremi C. Onabanjo: Expanding the Horizons of Photographic Histories

Learn more about Vilcek Prize winner, curator, and scholar Oluremi C. Onabanjo’s impactful work expanding the horizons of the history of photography.
Oluremi standing in the Sculpture Garden at the MoMA with green trees visible behind her.
February 3, 2025

Pioneering Change: Bernardo Mosqueira’s Visionary Curatorial Practice

Explore the impactful curatorial journey of Bernardo Mosqueira, a champion of freedom, transgression, enchantment, and transformation in the art world.
Bernardo stands on the New York City streets with city architecture visible behind him.

You may also be interested in

Aimé Iglesias Lukin

Aimé Iglesias Lukin receives the Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Curatorial Work for her leadership promoting the art of the Americas, and her focused initiatives to achieve recognition for historically underrepresented migrant and women artists.
A portrait of Aimé Iglesias Lukin.

Oluremi C. Onabanjo

Oluremi C. Onabanjo receives the Vilcek Prize in Curatorial Work for her work to examine the power, position, and production of Blackness in relation to the unfinished global history of the photographic medium.
A portrait of Oluremi Onabanjo.

Francesca Du Brock

Francesca Du Brock receives the Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History for her holistic and comprehensive approach to exhibition curation and to public education and engagement with art through museum programming.
A portrait of Francesca DuBrock.

Join our mailing list

Sign Up
Vilcek Foundation
21 East 70th Street
New York, New York 10021

Phone: 212.472.2500

Email: info@vilcek.org

  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Our Founders
    • Our Team
    • Press Center
    • Contact
  • Prizes
    • Prize Recipients
    • Vilcek Prizes
    • Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise
    • Vilcek Prize for Excellence
    • Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History
  • Art
  • Grants
    • Grants History
  • Events
  • News
  • Careers
Connect with us
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Facebook
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Instagram
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on X
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on LinkedIn
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Youtube
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Vimeo
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility Statement
© 2025   Vilcek Foundation
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok