Priamo Lozada, curator and specialist in electronic and digital media, passed away in June 15th in Venice, while preparing what it was going to be his most important project: the Mexican pavilion of the Venice Biennial. The 45 years old curator died due to an accident suffered in Venice one week before the inauguration of the event. In May 28th, Lozada fell down the balcony of the apartment he rented in Venice and he was in coma during two weeks in a hospital at Mestre. Priamo was born in 1962 in Santo Domingo and he settled in Mexico since 1997. In 1999 he organized the first Video and Electronic Art Festival of México and the exhibition Before and After Kraftwerk, at the Ex Teresa Arte Actual Center. From 2002 he performed as a curator in chief of the recent created Alameda Art Laboratory, becoming his main driving force. While directing this institution, he organized important exhibitions of artists such as Antoni Muntadas, Mona Hatoum, Daniel Buren and Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. In 2002 he quit to participate as a curator in the International Video and Electronic Arts Vidarte Festival, due to some differences with the direction of the festival. Although, in 2005, when México was the invited country at ARCO Art of Spain Fair, he organized Data Space, an exhibition of digital art that was presented at the Cultural Code Duque Center. In 2006 he organized Tijuana Sessions exhibition for the Alcala 31 center in Madrid and in November of last year he was the artistic director, among with Barbara Perea, of Plataforma Puebla 2006 project. Last May he went to Venice to carry out the exhibition Algunas cosas pasan más veces que todo el tiempo (Somethings happen more times that the whole time), by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, in which Mexico debuted his national participation at the Biennial. Unfortunately, he could not see materialized his project because the surprise of his death. Lozano-Hemmer dedicated the inauguration of the project to the memory of this notable curator whose career integrated and promote the electronic arts in México.