Daisy Quezada Ureña

[2] She creates ceramic and fabric works and installations that speak on themes of identity and place in relation to social structures and imposed borders.

[1] She moved back to the United States where her family intended for her and her two sisters to attend school.

[1] Since then, she has worked at SFUAD in various roles, exhibited in major shows regionally and internationally, completed a residency at Santa Fe Art Institute, and received a Fulcrum Fund grant.

[2] In 2016 Quezada was one of the cofounders of Present Cartographers, a collective invested in creating a platform for artists working within the theme of immigration.

Most recently the collective launched Terreno: Borderland Linguistics, a chapbook of writing and visual work by ten national and international artists.