Grant Recipients Grants to Artists Performance Art/Theater 2026

Lukas Avendaño

Headshot of Lukas Avendaño. Avendaño looks at the camera, her hair is covering her left eye  and folded into various parts of the beaded turquoise necklace wrapped around her neck  in multiple layers. She is wearing a dangling silver earring in her right ear and is shirtless. There is a black backdrop behind Avendaño.
Photo by Isa Sanz.
  • 2026 Grants to Artists
  • Performance Art/Theater
  • Performance Artist and Dancer
  • Born 1977, Oaxaca, Mexico
  • Lives in Oaxaca, Mexico
  • Muxe/first name preferred; she/her if needed
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  • Additional Information
  • comtransperformance.blogspot.com

Artist Statement

Calling me an artist is a bit of an error, as I have always sought to imagine that “other possible world.” I only desire peace; I only strive to generate dialogues where our phenotypic, sexual, and gender identities, our symbolic, economic, cultural, or social capital are not obstacles to knowing one another, embracing one another, being moved, and loving one another. In walking under the shadow of “art,” I continually find that our pains are the same, and from this place I share the stage, dance, the performing arts, and life itself. I frequently question whether this is what makes me an artist.

- December 2025

Biography

Lukas Avendaño is a performer and dancer who uses anthropology as a tool to examine sexuality, gender, and ethnicity within performance. She approaches these subjects through reflection and insubordination—an approach she describes as an “archaeology of memory” or “forensic archaeology.” Avendaño’s work has been characterized as disobedient militancy, sexual dissidence, rural folklore, “travesti” (a term for a gender-dissident identity) improvisation, and “Art Nako”(art that refuses to behave)—asking to be uncomfortable, ugly, loud, or excessive to expose power, violence, and exclusion. For her, these characterizations reveal a hegemonic narrative built from “the thesis with a systemic flaw at its origin,” reinforcing the idea that her very existence is conceived as a story of collateral damage resulting from an epistemic and ontological “original flaw.” Her performances range from participatory public actions to choreographed, multimedia works and are consistently rooted in political engagement.

Avendaño’s longest running piece, Buscando a Bruno, is a public performance and “strategic litigation” that premiered at the Consulate of Mexico in Barcelona, Spain, in 2018. Buscando a Bruno exposes Mexico’s “forced disappearances” through a personal quest to find her own brother. The performance, a durational work, foregrounds the individual and political dimensions of absence by staging two chairs side by side: one used by Avendaño, cradling a photograph of her brother, and the other left empty to be inhabited by others who share the wound and come to sit in solidarity. The work confronts state violence and impunity, while an active search for truth and justice takes place. It has since been presented at public sites and museums including Museo Universitario del Chopo, Mexico City (2018) and Museo de Arte Moderno, Oaxaca (2018).

Avendaño’s work has been shown globally, including at Pabellón Escénico INBAL, Mexico City, Mexico (2025); Sandrell Rivers Theater, Miami, FL (2024); The United Theater on Broadway, Los Angeles, CA (2024); RE/BIRTH Festival at DE SINGEL, Antwerp, Belgium (2024); Holland Festival, Internationaal Theater Amsterdam (ITA), Amsterdam, Netherlands (2023); and Kampnagel (k6 Hall), Hamburg, Germany (2022); among others.

Avendaño was a member of the prestigious Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte of the Sistema de Apoyos a la Creación y Proyectos Culturales (SACPC), Mexico (2021-2023). She has received a commission from LACMA Art + Technology Lab, Los Angeles, CA (2021) and was awarded the Travesías Escénicas Award by Barro Rojo Arte Escénica in Mexico (2021). Avendaño was honored by the Compañía Danza Universitaria during the University of Costa Rica’s annual [ ] Paréntesis Espacio de Danza Festival (2021), and received the Premio a la Identidad Indígena at FICWALMAPU in Temuco, Chile (2020).

Avendaño holds a B.A. in Anthropology from Universidad Veracruzana in Veracruz, Mexico (1998-2002). Following studies in dance while in Veracruz in the early 2000s, she completed one year of the Specialization in Dance Creation at the Centro de Investigación Coreográfica (CICO-INBA) in Mexico City (2006-07), and artist–educator training from National Dance Institute (NDI) in New York, NY (2008).

Lukas Avendaño mid-performance, lying down with her back on a stone table, arms to the side and  eyes closed. Avendaño is naked, but covered from the waist down by a hospital linen, which matches  the bare white brick wall in the background and the white lamp that hangs above the center of her body.  White cloths are neatly stacked on the table along her body and head, which is decorated with a gold  crown of thorns. There are also several trays and a small bouquet of white, purple, and red flowers beside her.

Performance still from Buscando a Bruno at Casa Nacional del Estudiante, Mexico City, Mexico, 2018. Photo by Mario Patiño.

Lukas Avendaño mid-performance in a dimly lit room with paint chipped off the walls. Avendaño is tied  up, with her stomach against a wooden table, wearing only red high heals. Her shoulders, elbows, hands,  and ankles are bound together with a beige rope, while her forearm and wrists are tied with a makeshift  red rope. Avendaño’s eyes are closed and her mouth gagged with a green ball reminiscent of a prickly  pear cactus pierced with black spikes. Gold earrings dangle from her ear and her hair is decorated with  a black feather, pink ribbon, and yellow accessory.

Performance still from Buscando a Bruno at Casa Nacional del Estudiante, Mexico City, Mexico, 2018. Photo by Mario Patiño.

Lukas Avendaño mid-performance. Avendaño is laying down to the side and undressed as her arms and  feet are bound behind her with a beige rope. An assortment of tapered red cloths are knotted together  throughout her genital region and between her legs. Avendaño is illuminated by a soft spotlight and the  rest of the room is dark.

Performance still from Buscando a Bruno at Casa Nacional del Estudiante, Mexico City, Mexico, 2018. Photo by Mario Patiño.

Side view of Lukas Avendaño mid performance. Wearing a costume made of ayoyotl and a large feather  headdress, Avendaño stands with her back to the audience on a red runner rug between the front church  pews. The audience is seated throughout the pews.

Performance still from Bardaje at St Ninian's Scottish Episcopal Church, Glasgow, Scotland, 2025. Photo by Brian Hartley.

Mid-performance close up of Lukas Avendaño. Avendaño is looking up at the front of her feather  headdress as a yellow rope is coiled around her mouth and looped around her head, just over her ears, which  are decorated with long gold earrings. Inside the center of the rope coiled at her mouth is a flat silver object,  which juts outwards. Her face is painted red and blue. A beaded turquoise necklace is wrapped around  Avendaño's neck in multiple layers. The image is cut just after her shoulders, where she wears ayoyotl.

Performance still from Bardaje at St Ninian's Scottish Episcopal Church, Glasgow, Scotland, 2025. Photo by Brian Hartley.

Buscando a Bruno, Consulado de Mexico en Barcelona, España, 2018.

Buscando a Bruno, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Oaxaca, Oax., Mexico, 2018.

No soy persona, soy mariposa, Foro Escénico INBAL, Mexico City, Mexico, 2025.

Lemniskata, Centro Cultural Conjunto Santander, Guadalajara, Jal., Mexico, 2022