
Studio Lenca
Studio Lenca is a design and art collective whose work draws inspiration from the indigenous Lenca culture of Central America, particularly Honduras and El Salvador. The studio produces decorative arts, textiles, and mixed-media works that blend pre-Columbian aesthetic traditions with contemporary craft practices. Their pieces have appeared in specialized auction sales focusing on Latin American art and decorative objects, attracting collectors interested in culturally rooted contemporary craft.
Artists in conversation

Alfredo Jaar

Jaar similarly blends cultural identity with mixed media and assemblage practices, engaging with Latin American histories and communities through richly textured and conceptually layered artworks.

Kerry James Marshall

Marshall's figurative and portrait works in acrylic and oil on canvas share Studio Lenca's commitment to centering culturally specific identities within a contemporary decorative and painterly tradition.

Olga de Amaral

De Amaral fuses pre-Columbian textile traditions with gold leaf and mixed media assemblage, producing decorative yet conceptually rich works that closely parallel Studio Lenca's aesthetic and cultural approach.
Artists who inspired them

Diego Rivera

Rivera's monumental integration of indigenous Central American and Mesoamerican iconography into figurative and landscape compositions directly prefigures Studio Lenca's revival of pre-Columbian visual traditions in contemporary craft.

Frida Kahlo

Kahlo's use of portraiture, indigenous decorative elements, and oil painting to assert cultural identity in Latin America provided a foundational model for Studio Lenca's figurative and culturally rooted mixed media practice.

Ana Mendieta

Mendieta's exploration of indigenous spiritual traditions and landscape as sites of cultural memory and identity deeply informs Studio Lenca's approach to landscape and figurative works rooted in Central American heritage.


