In Mythic Paintings, Anna Ortiz Conjures the Uncanny of the Borderlands — Colossal


For Anna Ortiz, the borderlands are a rich source for the uncanny. The Mexican-American artist (previously) was raised in Worcester, Massachusetts, but visited her family in Guadalajara often. There, she was immersed in her ancestral landscape and introduced to her family’s history as artists—her grandfather painted portraits, while her aunt was a professional sculptor.

These formative experiences offered a contrast to her life in the Northeast and the dichotomous relationship between the two continues to influence her thinking and practice today.

a diptych of two cacti paintings
“Al Otro Lado de Texcoco” (2025), oil on canvas, 48 x 72 inches

For her upcoming solo exhibition at Mindy Solomon Gallery, Ortiz conjures a surreal borderland that suspends time. Awash in saturated color palettes of pink, blue, and green, the paintings in Prophecy Here and Gone reference Aztec histories and how their influence continues to shape the landscape.

In the diptych “Al Otro Lado de Texcoco,” for example, a gleaming lake peeks through dense clusters of cacti. Nested at the base of the volcano La Malinche, the body of water greeted the Aztecs when they moved to what’s now known as Mexico City. When the Spanish arrived, they drained the lake in a failed attempt to farm the land.

Ortiz tells Colossal that she frequently paints pairs as a way to consider unfulfilled destinies and paths not chosen. Twin agaves appear in “Pareja,” while “Tula” depicts a couple of totemic sculptures that appear to be standing guard. Flat butterflies grace their chests, a reference to the statues found at the capital of the Aztecs’ ancestors, the Toltecs. The artist similarly incorporates doubling through reflections, as a majestic jaguar is mirrored in the aquatic foregrounds of several paintings.

World-building and offering an entry point into ancient prophecies is key to this body of work. Interested in the ways civilization and the landscape interact and shape one another, Ortiz shares that “loss is a central theme…I was once very close to my Mexican heritage, and I lost it. I grew up fluent in Spanish but because of family strife, I lost that fluency.”

a pair of totemic sculptures stand in front of a volcano with green raining down
“Tula” (2025), oil on canvas, 28 x 22 inches

Ortiz’s paintings both honor the ancient peoples and cultures that once occupied the land and present an alternative universe in which their myths and prophecies had different outcomes. Vibrant and uncanny, the works portray the “lives we were unable to live but (that) happened without us,” she adds. 

Prophecy Here and Gone is on view from April 5 to May 10 in Miami. Find more from Ortiz on her website and Instagram.

two pink plants in front of a mountain range and lake
“Agaves Bailando” (2024), oil on canvas, 38 x 32 inches
a jaguar with a reflection in water prowls in a green-washed desert
“Reflejada” (2025), oil on canvas, 40 x 48 inches
a cacti wrapped around a pink heart in a desert landscape
“Sacrificio” (2023), oil on canvas, 48 x 40 inches
two blue agave plants in a green desert landscape
“Pareja” (2025), oil on canvas, 30 x 34 inches
a figurative sculpture with green and pink plants growing from it in a desert
“Gemelos Amaranto” (2025), oil on canvas, 38 x 32 inches
a pair of blue cacti in front of mountains in blue and purple
“En Orbita” (2025), oil on canvas, 22 x 28 inches
a mythic statue stands in the desert in front of an exploding volcano
“Cihuacoatl” (2025), oil on canvas, 28 x 22 inches
a cat sculpture with a human head in its mouth stands in a glowing green-blue desert landscape
“Nahual” (2025), oil on canvas, 38 x 32 inches



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