JM
17 September 2025

Artist Talk with Joiri Minaya

Artist Talk | September 17, 2025 | 14.00 - 16.30 | Studio, Wereldmuseum Amsterdam

The Research Center for Material Culture is pleased to invite you to our public talk with our research fellow Joiri Minaya. We are looking forward to engaging with Joiri Minaya's parcour and artistry and diving into this year's research theme: Hospitality.

Photo by Elliott Jerome Brown Jr, courtesy of Art21
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About the event

As part of our research themes for 2025, we at the RCMC began exploring the concept of hospitality. On the one hand, we looked inwards to think together about what it entails for an organisation like ours to be hospitable. We began to feel the impossibility of hospitality and questioned its ethics, as inviting guests often requires burdening them with visa paperwork and hostile border police upon arrival. On the other hand, we looked at the ease with which Western Europeans can travel, and how tourism from these countries can often advertise the fantasy of hospitality in locations that bear this expectation with a heavy colonial history. We then ask, what does it mean for a country to be conscripted in its hospitality?   

We are very excited to welcome Joiri Minaya as a 2025 RCMC research fellow. Throughout her work, she has been exploring how tropical identity has become a product, among which is the the creation and the exploitation of the Caribbean in the tourism industry. During this session, we asked Minaya to reflect on her work concerning the ideas of hospitality, the neocolonial tourism industry, and the notions of diaspora and diaspora identity making.  

 
Her talk will be complemented by a workshop with her and artist Raziel Perin on September 14th. 

About Joiri Minaya

Joiri Minaya, born in New York in 1990 and raised in the Dominican Republic, attended the Escuela Nacional de Artes Visuales, Santo Domingo in 2009, Altos de Chavón School of Design in 2011, and received a BFA from Parsons School of Design in 2013. She has participated in residencies at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture; Guttenberg Arts; Smack Mellon; the Bronx Museum’s AIM Program; the NYFA Mentoring Program for Immigrant Artists; ISCP; Art Omi; Vermont Studio Center; New Wave; Silver Art Projects; Light Work; and Fountainhead. She has received awards, fellowships and grants from the US LatinX Art Forum; NYSCA / NYF; Jerome Hill; Artadia; the BRIC’s Colene Brown Art Prize; Socrates Sculpture Park; the Joan Mitchell Foundation; and the Nancy Graves Foundation, among others. Minaya’s work is in the collections of the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Princeton University Art Museum, NJ; MIT List Visual Art Center, Cambridge, MA; El Museo del Barrio, New York, NY; and Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO; as well as the Centro León, Santiago, and Museo de Arte Moderno, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; and the Fundación Ama Amoedo Collection in Uruguay.