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Artist

Luisé Cisneros

Drawing on public fluidity interventions, Luisé creates interactive works, such as wearable sculptures and audience-activated installations, that explore how the body is politicized through themes of migration and gender. Hir current research flow of hir practice as an exploration of water as a dynamic happening across indigenous cosmologies, including the work of Leanne Betasamosake Simpson and Robin Wall Kimmerer, queer ecological thought as Cleo Wölfflin Hazard, and the politics of migration through the work of Helen Ngo and Judith Butler. At the centre of hir practice is identity, but not an expression of it so much as a questioning, dissection, and scrutinization of it. The interrogation identity within hir practice reflects hir relationship to a place through both how it orients ze and is thus embodied, as well as how it facilitates and prohibits hir belonging.

Artists Bio
Luisé is a Chicago-based non-binary Mexican-Canadian artist currently pursuing an MFA in Sculpture at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Working across sculpture, installation, and public art, Luisé’s career is rooted in artistic advocacy for immigrant queer communities. In September of this year, Luisé received the 2025 Arts Recognition Award from the Quinte Arts Council. Luisé earned a BFA from OCAD University, where ze was recognized with the IGNITE Installation Award Exhibition, the BMO Sustainability Award, and the Haydn Davies Memorial Award for hir thesis works titled Happening in the Land and Embodiments of Happenings. That same year, Ze was also selected to design and create the Writers Guild of Canada Screenwriting Award trophy. In 2024, Ze was awarded the Craft Ontario Community Award for hir solo show Queer Quinte: Memory & Celebration, honouring Pride Month, at the Quinte Arts Council Gallery in Belleville.
Ze is a two-time recipient of the Jurors’ Choice Award at the Pride London Art Show (TAP Centre for Creativity, 2017 and 2018). Luisé has also sold various commissioned paintings and sculptures to private collectors in Canada, as well as to the City of Toronto, with support from Councillor Kyle Rae. Additionally, Luisé has completed a number of public art works including murals across GTA in Ontario as part of the “Outside the Box” program at Street Art Toronto, with recent works “Immigration” located in Scarborough (Warden Avenue and Bridletowne Circle, 2023) and “Diaspora” in downtown Toronto (Front Street and St. George, 2022), as well as a group show at BigArtTO (Scarborough-Agincourt Building). Luisé’s other exhibitions include the Arts Council Windsor and Artcite Inc. (Windsor, Ontario), the LAI-4 exhibition (New York City, Bogotá, and Brooklyn), and Artwerk! Collective (Art Gallery of Ontario).  Ze also presented hir first solo exhibition taking place at Cry Baby Gallery in 2023.

Feature Works