A nonprofit organization created to support contemporary art in Colombia and Latin America, the Fundación MISOL announced the winners of the Creation Grant for young Latin American artist and the Curatorship Grant for a project centered on Colombian art. The 2014 Curatorship Grant went to Alejandro Martín for his project The Devil Probably. It is a proposal that poses the question "Who drives us?" and offers the hypothetical answer "The devil probably." Basing the project on a series of references—including several from the fields of cinema and literature—Martín invited a group of artists, accustomed to developing works connected to concrete cultural contexts, to think about the notion of evil as a force that drives our society. Alejandro Martín studied mathematics and philosophy. He has developed digital, editorial and exhibition projects, like the book titled Colección de Arte Contemporáneo: Maria Fernanda Cardoso, Óscar Muñoz, Luis Roldán, or the exhibitions The Other and Waterweavers. Erika Ordosgoitti (Venezuela) was awarded the 2014 MISOL Creation Grant for Young Latin American Artist for her project Food for Flies. Her work relies on the use of performance, poetry, photography and video that she develops through the intervention of public spaces in which she used her body to transgress the boundaries of freedom of expression. The work that she developed with the help of the MISOL Grant is a video installation that includes a life-size wood scaffold and a video that records the action performed in Bogota. This work will be exhibited alongside earlier works by Ordosgoitti that will help viewers in Colombia contextualize the winning project. Erika Ordosgoitti is currently completing a Masters in art from the Universidad Pedagógica Experimental Libertador and has a BFA from the same university. She has participated in several personal exhibitions in Venezuela, Argentina and Colombia (Bogota). She lives and works in Caracas.