Friday, December 21, 2012

Arte Al Día / International / Contents / Artists / News / Sixteen Latin American artists exploring Cultural Landscapes at the UMUC

Arte Al Día / International / Contents / Artists / News / Sixteen Latin American artists exploring Cultural Landscapes at the UMUC

Map of Truth, 2008
Pieces of clothing belonging to the artist, wood, and embroidery floss, 132 x 93 in.


Vista:
Unfolding the Mapping Process
Curated by Jodie Dinapoli and Eva Mendoza Chandas
 
Graphic representations of maps and places are characterized by the nature of their content and purpose, which makes the process of mapping range from the simplest to most complex forms of depiction.
For hundreds of years artists have been involved in the process of mapping as well as capturing the visible features of a site. From lines on ceramic plaques to accurate cartographies and mathematical designs, this activity has served as a tool to resolve practical issues such as territorial and political boundaries, and to outline scientific information as well as further investigative notions of identity.
Departing from the original concept of a map and the process of its creation, Vista exhibits works by Contemporary Latin American Artists inspired by mapmaking as a creative and exploration process, including compositions based on memory, identity and utopian views of the future. This process involves outlining, charting, depicting, building and tracing, as well as distortion and other less cartographical techniques.
When artist Horacio Zabala began working on maps of Argentina and South America in the 1970s, he introduced a new framework of semantic reference to the objects he altered. In Six images of fragment 30 (Argentina) III maps are deformed and reworked in a way that alters both the purpose and the function of the original image, modifying the concepts of the cartographical order through the addition of elements that incorporate a certain degree of randomness to the act of creation. The result is a series of images that are neither entirely random nor totally accurate.
Imprecision is one of the premises of Carola Bravo´s work, which focuses on blurring the limits of the concept of territory. Bravo´s endeavor departs from the idea that maps are by nature a distortion of reality, something limited and incapable of transmitting the “infinity” of a territory. Combining line and space, her work aims to highlight the flexibility and openness of the mapping exercise. Shaking our world is a construction in space based on seismic data organized in groups of drawn circles that show epicenters of real earthquakes. Bravo´s technique aims to present the world through its underground explosions, making the size of each circle proportional to the scale of the seism. In the video Mutant Maps, Bravo continues to highlight the imprecision of the maps by drawing lines over lines that correspond to diagrams of her hometown in Venezuela. Embracing the line as the center of all human relations, Bravo invites viewers to add their own referential connections.
Science and connectivity are at the heart of Rafael Vargas Suarez´s work, resulting in drawings and paintings dominated by lines over a negative space. An Astronomer and Art Historian, Vargas Suarez is interested in the relationship between artists and scientists in culture. His works reflect this association, representing the connections between different types of data, ranging from astronomical to medical and historical. Cosmodrome Vectors outlines space walks through the algebraic model of information representation, presenting a black and white composition in which black references the outlying space. This elucidates our complex physiological relationship to space, whether we understand it as something either known —a map or a territory of his native Mexico—or unknown, beyond our reach.
 References to unknown stories and memories are represented in Vacío (Empty) by Rodrigo Echeverri Depicted in a minimal-style language, this diptych presents a geometrical composition of solid monochromatic blocks arranged on a white backdrop.  Echeverri uses minimalism as a tool to reference personal and contextual narratives. In this case the work refers to the information provided by the black boxes airlines use. These boxes contain encoded pieces that give information not only on the history of a journey but also on the memories of the travelers.
Alberto Borea develops maps as a way to record his own experiences in time and space. In this sense Borea’s works are a residue of his identity quest. In Invisible World two globes have been separated from their stands, which are left unused, but then gain importance in a game in which all the elements appear to be equally significant. In Cardiogram, Borea uses cut-out names from popular art guides to highlight the commercialism of his profession in a graphic representation of the vibrant pulse of the world of Latin American artists living in the US.
Támara Kostianovsky pieces together enormous maps from the artist’s own altered clothing. Rendering a territory in expansion, the clothes are sewed together to form abstract maps that narrate a very personal perspective. The Map of Truth is a composition that explores the idea of how identity is imprinted on the skin. This poetical narrative, drawn from the artist´s personal experience, is also the point of departure of Esperanza Mayobre´s Temporal Humanitarian Status. From the perspective of herself as an immigrant the artist in this piece uses an eye chart composed of visas to the United States. Next to the chart, Mayobre sets an architectural drawing representing a grid continuously perpetuating itself, which is followed by an image of a wall depicting each immigrant´s own border.
Inverting the idea of impenetrable borders, José Ruíz´s No Diaspora invites us to transcend this notion and reflect on the multiple readings derived from the resulting experience and that of returning home at last, rather than endlessly departing and having to set up a new residence.
The dichotomy between mobility and stability is presented in Gisela Insuaste´s Fe and Vacuums en camino- por el cielo y la tierra, fragmented interventions in space forming a composite of different places she has traveled to and of references to her home and her family, Ecuadorians who immigrated to the United States in the 70s. Using interdependent ambiguous parts from different kinds of collected materials, such as wood, wire, vacuum cleaner parts, and paper. This visual “mapping” of her own past and present transforms the exhibition space as she questions those cultural conventions embedded in the urban and architectural principles that determine our cultural spaces.

Cultural differences are always present in the lives of those who have left their home countries. Travelers and foreigners have to adapt to new environments where, even if similar, conditions are never exactly the same as those left behind. Relocation implies reorganization. The exercise of adjusting to a different context requires new systems of organization, which may be why this technique is visually vital in the works of artists like Silvina Arismendi. She uses fragments from everyday life as elements that, when put together, describe a personal navigation. In Untitled, Arismendi presents a sequence of canvases that are painted black. Arranged by size, they grow within the space as parts of a dark sky at night.
Pilita García l recreates unknown expanding cities and spaces, organizing them in layers that comprise a mass of superimposed structures, lines and images. In Gallery, these visual structures transform the wall of the exhibition space into a view of a gallery space by arranging different materials such as paper, collage and canvas that seemingly recall a familiar space, one that can be created through an online database of images.
These new visual systems are employed by Camilo Sanin, who overlaps grids and other geometric patterns to establish new visual arrangements of the space around him, as can be seen in Estructura Subyacente. In Epipelagic One and Mesopelagic One, the artist takes his research underwater and studies the variances in superimposing grids at different levels below the surface of the earth.
In contrast to Sanin’s pronounced geometry, Elena Patiño creates organic-shaped installations. Using synthetic mass-produced materials, she crafts hand felted balls that scatter across the wall, as in Color Migration, where single units form a greater mass, alluding to what takes place in a heavily industrialized society. Invariably in this kind of discourse, which focuses on the perspective of outsiders, the need arises to compare what is known to what is being discovered, as well as to that which is better or worse, or what can or cannot be improved This analysis takes into account different geographies, cultures and times, past, present and future.
This is consistent with the way some artists in their works suggest other possible realities or time frames in their depictions of the present. Nicky Enright, for example, presents what could be a global future monetary currency. The Globo is a work composed of bills in an attaché case set on a pedestal and framed prints of the bills representing a world unified under a hypothetical single currency. This work envisions a global unity, suggesting that social progress runs parallel to the increasing reach of corporate financial influence.
Another interpretation of this globalized future is presented by Priscila de Carvalho in Wonderland and Settlements, in which the artist introduces urban landscapes inhabited by slum dwellers, revealing the complexity of a society where progress has multiple profiles and repercussions. For his part, Cesar Cornejo explores new models of relation between the individual and the constructed environment. His Museomorphosis II redefines traditional models and proposes alternative architectural constructions that impede social injustice and attend to the revitalization of the communities and to the improvement of their living conditions.
Through structures, abstractions, urban landscapes, installations and new media, Vista reveals different approaches to the process of understanding territory from the social to the personal, from the concrete to the abstract, from the exceptional to the conventional. All the artworks have been brought together to debate and to show the different possibilities of maps, understanding them as evolving social, political and cultural constructions derived from changing cosmologies and canons.

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