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Home > Prizes > Prize Recipients > Bernardo Mosqueira

Bernardo Mosqueira

2025 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Curatorial Work

Location

New York, NY

Title

Chief Curator, Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA), New York;
Artistic Director, Solar dos Abacaxis, Rio de Janeiro;
Director, Premio FOCO ArtRio, Rio de Janeiro

Area(s) of Research

Contemporary art, Queer art, Global South art, Latin American art, Art and Spirituality, New Materialisms

Education

Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro [UFRJ] (BA, Journalism, Social Communication);
Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College (MA, Curatorial Studies)

Country of Birth

Brazil

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Links to learn more about Bernardo Mosqueira's work
  • Independent Curators International

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art art history artistic director Bard College Brazil curator Institute for Latin American Art journalism New Museum New York visual art
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A portrait of Bernardo Mosquiera.

Bernardo Mosqueira is committed to building institutions and frameworks that provide meaningful support and create platforms for emerging artists, especially from the Global South, Latin America, and the diasporas. His work bridges artists with institutions: from his leadership of arts organizations and funding initiatives in his home country of Brazil to empower artists with tools for professional success; to curating groundbreaking exhibitions for major institutions around the world, including at the New Museum and the Institute for Studies in Latin American Art in the United States.

In 2017, he was listed as “One of the 20 most influential curators in Latin America” by Artsy. In 2023, Cultured Magazine highlighted Mosqueira as one of the six “visionary curators” in their annual list of Young Curators. Also in 2023, he was named by APOLLO Magazine as “one of the 10 most inspirational thinkers living in the U.S.” in their 40 under 40 list.

Bernardo leans on a book display case in the lobby of an art gallery.
Bernardo Mosqueira pictured at The Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA).

Mosqueira’s practice as a curator prioritizes a focus on freedom and transgression: from creating platforms for radical artists and narratives to centering works that expand and reshape conceptions and perceptions of gender, sexuality, spirituality, and community.

“[My practice] is dedicated to the idea that we can always transform the way we perceive the world, that we can always produce more harmonious ways of living together,” he says. Focused on alternate modes of living and existing, Mosqueira’s work is deeply rooted in ​​ethics and justice. He intentionally challenges the categories created by colonialism that unevenly distribute resources and violence.

Bernardo holds a book whilst standing in front of a large bookcase filled with books.

As a young adult, Mosqueira became interested in the relationship between art and freedom, noticing that art could create spaces for those who felt outcast: the weird, the queer, the unconventional. 

For Mosqueria, developing an exhibition comes from this need to open space for a collective discussion. It’s critical that his curation contributes to advancing a much-needed and relevant topic in society. Ultimately, his work considers the legacy of every initiative, ambitioning that each part involved in an exhibition can, in some way, be positively transformed by it. 

Bernardo in a dark room studying a film negative on top of a light box.

While curating shows is at the center of his practice, Mosqueira is particularly passionate about institution-building, aligned with the belief in the power of art institutions to trigger and nurture transformations in society. “I love researching and experimenting with institutional strategies to make institutions relevant, vibrant, and inspiring. I would be very happy to look back and see that I contributed to the foundation and development of important art institutions.”

Awards & Accomplishments

  • Institute for Latin American Art (ISLAA) Curatorial Fellow at the New Museum, New York (2021-23)
  • Premio Lorenzo Bonaldi per l’Arte – EnterPrize, GAMeC, Bergamo (2017-18)

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Jury Members

2025 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Curatorial Work

Ian Alteveer

Beal Family Chair, Department of Contemporary Art, The Museum of Fine Art, Boston

Carlos Basualdo

Marion Boulton “Kippy” Stroud Deputy Director and Chief Curator, The Philadelphia Museum of Art

Alison Gass

Krieger Family Director, Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco

Valerie Cassel Oliver

Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Jane Panetta

Aaron I. Fleischman Curator, Department of Modern and Contemporary Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Akili Tommasino

Associate Curator, Modern and Contemporary Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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art art history artistic director Bard College Brazil curator Institute for Latin American Art journalism New Museum New York visual art
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