Taller Puertorriqueño

Taller Puertorriqueño Known as El Corazón Cultural del Barrio (The Cultural Heart of Latinx Philadelphia)
(316)

Taller is a nonprofit Latino arts and cultural organization located in the new El Corazón Cultural Center at 5th and Huntingdon Streets (2600 N 5th Street). Taller is located in the Fairhill section of Northwest Kensington in Philadelphia. Taller’s programs work at the nexus of arts, culture, human rights, and social advocacy to catalyze social change towards community advancement. We offer progra

ms for youth and adults, operate an art gallery dedicated to Puerto Rican and Latine artists, the region’s only Spanish-English bilingual bookstore, sponsor musical and theater events, and organize a wide range of engaging cultural art education programs. Our education programs for children and youth offer unique art and educational experiences as an effective vehicle to build creative and competent community members. Over the years, Taller has thrived in a community struggling with high unemployment and dropout rates, drugs, prejudice, and violence. This stands as a testament to the role Taller plays in celebrating this community’s strength, resilience, diversity and cultural richness. Taller’s Programs

• Cultural Exploration Program: Introduces young students to local artists, performers, and educators who guide the children on a year-long journey of self-discovery. 150 participants annually.

• Youth Artists Program is a two-year program for up to 15 talented high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Students develop their artistic skills and produce a solid portfolio of work they can use to apply to highly-competitive arts colleges.

• Visítenos (Visit Us) engages K-12 students in creative exploration of Latine cultures through videos of traditional dances, music records, and hands-on experiences with vejigante masks, drawing and painting, dance and more. Long-term residencies in schools fill the gap of decreasing arts experiences in Philadelphia School District Schools. Currently serving ~700 students.

• The Eugenio Maria de Hostos Archives is a resource center that includes a varied collection of books, periodicals, articles, oral histories and research, often out of print, focusing on Latinx culture and history. The Archives are a resource for students and scholars.

• The Lorenzo Homar Gallery is the region’s only art gallery dedicated to Latin American and Caribbean art, many of the exhibitions highlighting contemporary artists from the Philadelphia region. 3,000 visitors annually.

• Julia de Burgos Gift Shop, a destination for original Latinx artwork, crafts, handmade jewelry and collectibles, serves as the only Spanish-English bilingual bookstore of its kind in the Pennsylvania, Delaware and South Jersey region. Augmenting the store is an ongoing series of author presentations. 2,000 visitors annually.

• The Annual Feria del Barrio, a collaboration between Taller, Congreso, Raíces Culturales Latinoamericanas, HACE, and GALAEI, Feria presents six hours of live Latin rhythms and dance performances. Community organizations provide information; artists demonstrate their work; and corporations promote their products. 10,000 participants annually. Taller’s programs annually result in the following outcomes:
- 360 children and youth from the immediate community participate in on-site after-school, summer programs, and classes at collaborating organizations during the highest-risk out of school time.
- Over 5,000 student encounters annually via workshops, artist residencies and Taller’s Visítenos program, supplementing school arts curriculum and filling a void of Latinx arts programming.
- 15,000 adults from throughout Philadelphia and the region attend gallery exhibitions, festivals, lectures and performances, bringing foot traffic to Taller’s community and boosting economic participation.
- Over 80,000 adult audiences have access to Taller’s off-site art exhibits at community partner organizations such as Congreso de Latinos Unidos, among others.

Join us at Taller on June 4th from 6-8pm for a community conversation presented by
05/28/2026

Join us at Taller on June 4th from 6-8pm for a community conversation presented by

Updated hours for the upcoming holiday weekend. Taller will be closing at 2pm on Friday, May 22 and we will be closed on...
05/20/2026

Updated hours for the upcoming holiday weekend. Taller will be closing at 2pm on Friday, May 22 and we will be closed on Monday, May 25.

Join us for Part II of our July 4th Sin Colonias programming at Taller Puertorriqueño. Building on our Part I panel, whe...
05/20/2026

Join us for Part II of our July 4th Sin Colonias programming at Taller Puertorriqueño. Building on our Part I panel, where we heard from participants of the historic 1976 march, this next gathering brings the conversation into the present, linking that legacy to the urgent struggles shaping our communities today.

This event takes the form of a forum-style discussion, centering today’s organizers, artists, and activists as they share how they are responding to ongoing injustice. Together, we will ask: What does resistance look like now? What lessons have we learned from past decades of struggle? How are movements evolving? And how can we continue to build powerful coalitions across communities?
Grounded in the belief that art is a vital tool for protest, expression, and collective action, the program will also include hands-on activist banner-making activities, inviting participants to create united visual messages that speak to today’s struggles and futures and can be used in upcoming activities. 

As we approach the 50th anniversary of this historic march, we invite you to join us in discussing, creating, and organizing. This gathering serves as a powerful counterpoint to official U.S. semiquincentennial celebrations by centering community memory, present-day resistance, and the ongoing work of coalitions.

Presented by Taller Puertorriqueño + July 4th Sin Colonias Coalition

Remembering the Sin Colonias March of 1976 forms part of Taller’s yearlong initiative WE WILL NOT HIDE, which reclaims the radical legacy of the 1976 Sin Colonias March to affirm everyone’s right to visibility, respect, and self-determination. Through exhibitions, talks, and community programs, the series uplifts voices often marginalized in national commemorations, emphasizing inclusion, critique, and transformation as Philadelphia and the nation observe the 250th anniversary.

04/10/2026

Join us on Saturday April 11, 2026 1pm - 4pm at Taller Puertorriqueño for the Remembering the Sin Colonias March of 1976 Panel discussion!

Learn more at tallerpr.org

Remembering the Sin Colonias March of 1976 ✊🏽As the U.S. marked its Bicentennial, tens of thousands took to the streets ...
04/09/2026

Remembering the Sin Colonias March of 1976 ✊🏽

As the U.S. marked its Bicentennial, tens of thousands took to the streets of Philadelphia to demand something deeper—justice, dignity, and an end to colonialism. “A Bicentennial Without Colonies” wasn’t just a protest; it was a powerful declaration of unity across communities պայքարի spirit that still resonates today.

Now, nearly 50 years later, we gather to honor that moment. Join us for Part I: Voices from la Lucha 1976—a panel discussion centering the stories, memories, and ongoing impact of this historic march.
Whether you were there in 1976 or are learning this history for the first time, your voice matters. Come reflect, connect, and carry the legacy forward.

📸 Featuring archival materials + opportunities to share your own memories

🗣 Panelists include historians, organizers, and movement leaders such as Alyssa Ribeiro, Pedro Rodriguez, Angel L. Ortiz & Edwin Mayorga.

Learn more at tallerpr.org

Join us for Remembering the Sin Colonias March of 1976 – Part I: Voices from la Lucha 1976 ✊🏽As we approach the 50th ann...
04/06/2026

Join us for Remembering the Sin Colonias March of 1976 – Part I: Voices from la Lucha 1976 ✊🏽

As we approach the 50th anniversary of the historic July 4, 1976 protest, we gather to honor a powerful moment when tens of thousands marched in Philadelphia for justice under the banner “A Bicentennial Without Colonies.” This special panel brings together voices who lived, studied, and organized during this pivotal time in our city’s history.

April 11 | 1:00–4:00 PM
📍 Taller Puertorriqueño (2600 N. 5th St, Philadelphia)

Featuring:
• Alyssa Ribeiro – Historian and author exploring multiracial activism in Philadelphia
• Pedro Rodriguez – 1976 march participant and longtime community organizer
• Angel L. Ortiz – Former Philadelphia City Councilmember and key protest organizer
Moderated by Edwin Mayorga (Swarthmore College)

This is more than a panel—it’s a space to remember, reflect, and reconnect with a legacy of resistance and solidarity. If you participated in the 1976 march, we invite you to share your stories. Archival materials from the protest will also be on display.

Whether you were there or are just learning this history, your voice matters. Come be part of the conversation.

04/02/2026

¡Letón Pe llega a Philadelphia por primera vez! 💧

Un show inolvidable te espera en Taller, en el corazón del barrio — con una presentación explosiva de Partywatcher ⚡
La próxima diva del pop dominicano está aquí.
�No te lo puedes perder.
🎟️ 16 de abril | boletos en tallerpr.org

03/31/2026

Desde Santo Domingo pa’ Philly 🇩🇴➡️🇺🇸
�Letón Pe llega por primera vez a Philadelphia y lo hace en casa — en Taller 💧

Con un show lleno de energía, deseo y poder… plus opening by Partywatcher 🔥
�No te lo puedes perder.
🎟️ April 16 | Tickets: tallerpr.org

Join us Friday, April 24 at 5:30 PM for the opening reception of Mi Isla y yo by Hagudeza Rullán-Fantauzzi. ✨This powerf...
03/27/2026

Join us Friday, April 24 at 5:30 PM for the opening reception of Mi Isla y yo by Hagudeza Rullán-Fantauzzi. ✨

This powerful exhibition draws connections between Puerto Rico’s ongoing fight for sovereignty and the struggle for bodily autonomy—revealing how histories of resistance continue to echo today.

Through photography, sculpture, and installation, Rullán-Fantauzzi explores identity, memory, and liberation. A central work, La Guerrera (2024), reclaims the Puerto Rican flag—once criminalized under the 1948 Gag Law—as a symbol of resilience, while connecting past repression to present-day struggles around trans visibility.

Featuring 10 works created since 2023, Mi Isla y yo invites us to confront repeating patterns of oppression—and imagine paths toward collective freedom. On View from April 24 – June 6, 2026

📍 Taller Puertorriqueño
🗓 Reception: Friday, April 24 | 5:30 PM
🔗RSVP at tallerpr.org/events/reception-hagudeza/ using the link in our bio.

Acompáñanos el viernes 24 de abril a las 5:30 PM para la recepción de apertura de Mi Isla y yo de Hagudeza Rullán-Fantauzzi. ✨

Esta poderosa exposición traza conexiones entre la lucha continua de Puerto Rico por la soberanía y la lucha por la autonomía corporal, revelando cómo las historias de resistencia siguen resonando en la actualidad.

A través de fotografía, escultura e instalación, Rullán-Fantauzzi explora la identidad, la memoria y la liberación. Una obra central, La Guerrera (2024), reapropia la bandera puertorriqueña—que fue criminalizada bajo la Ley de la Mordaza de 1948—como símbolo de resiliencia, conectando la represión del pasado con las luchas actuales por la visibilidad trans.

Con 10 obras creadas desde 2023, Mi Isla y yo nos invita a confrontar patrones repetitivos de opresión e imaginar caminos hacia la libertad colectiva. En exhibición del 24 de abril al 6 de junio de 2026.

📍 Taller Puertorriqueño
🗓 Recepción: viernes 24 de abril | 5:30 PM
🔗 Confirma tu asistencia en tallerpr.org/events/reception-hagudeza/ usando el enlace en nuestra biografía.

Address

2600 N 5th Street
Philadelphia, PA
19133

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Taller Puertorriqueño posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Museum

Send a message to Taller Puertorriqueño:

Share