The CACT Centro
d’Arte Contemporanea Ticino in Bellinzona announces the
opening on Saturday 29 April 2006 at 17:30 of
the exhibition entitled
IL GIGANTE BUONO.
ARTISTI DELL’AMERICA LATINA
THE GENTLE GIANT.
ARTISTS FROM LATIN AMERICA
Teresa Margolles,
Nils Nova, Tomàs Ochoa
The exhibition
seeks to offer a small-scale cross-section of Latin-American
artistic production and thought as developed in unusual
languages, though the primary medium is video. Its main
themes are human existence – its centrality, its resistance
to death – and dissipation and dissolution.
For some time
Teresa Margolles (Mexico, 1963) has been addressing
universal themes using – among other things – an element
that is indissolubly connected to life, namely, water.
Margolles deploys this element of existence and
survival in
another way,
however, calling into play our responsibilities as human and
political beings and showing a different face of
civilisation; this is an obscure reality but one we are all
familiar with. Working with installations, performance and
film, Margolles often uses water as the substance
with which dead bodies are washed. In her colour video
Baño (Bath), 2004, Margolles represents the
beauty of man in his entirety, posed and nude. The contrasts
of light she uses create an atmosphere that is reminiscent
of Caravaggio, just as the beauty reflected by the actor
involves the public in his hedonistic gesture and posture.
Here next to the double identity of the element – both pure
and contaminated – is the life/death duality of water.
Suddenly from “off screen” a bucket of water is thrown at
the body – three times in succession and at regular
intervals. The violence of this gesture transcends the term
bath or the concept of “having a wash”. The elements
necessary to an interpretation of this first work are also
suggested by the second video work on show in the
neighbouring room: a back-projection onto transparent paper
entitled El agua en la ciudad (Water in the city),
2004. In this silent work in black and white, the size of
the image does not correspond to the standard format of a
video. It is a section that extends – vertically pressed
down – in a very horizontal way. One thinks one is in a
morgue and one has a vision of two arms with rubber gloves
washing the body of a man who has died and been placed on a
gurney. The relationship pure water/dead body immediately
links back with the relationship, illustrated in the
previous video, between contaminated water/living body.
Other important dichotomies such as black-and-white/colour,
sound/silence immediately summon up images of a Memento
Mori, where the naked body also suggests the fragility of
the human being in the face of life and life’s randomness –
and refers not least to the political implications that run
through Margolles’ entire work.
The life and
artistic career of Nils Nova (El Salvador, 1968) is
special. Son of a Salvadoran “dissident”, an “intellectual”
unpopular with the regime, and a Swiss mother, Nova – born
in Central America – has been forced to live with the hybrid
nature of his double origin. Resident in Switzerland, his
work is influenced by western aesthetic criteria. The work
Over Your Head,
2002,
starts the exhibition by proposing a dry, minimal and
frightening vision of technologies as symbolism of death of
humanity and loss of the concept of reality. The artificial
light of several electric bulbs and the amplification of the
sound produced by the electric current, that makes them
function, create an sidereal, terrifying and inhuman. With
the video entitled
2 Elvis 4 you, 2006, Nova seeks to reflect on the
criteria of western artistic representation. Working within
the tradition of quotationism, N.N. starts from Andy
Warhol’s 1970s interviews and takes inspiration from
Warhol’s work-icon: the portrait-silkscreen-duplicate of
Elvis Presley. The artist intervenes in history: he takes on
the role of Presley – the icon of a generation – being
interviewed, and even replaces Warhol, again on the occasion
of a historic interview. Nova – in the video he showed this
year at the Kunstmuseum in Lucerne – engages with the
history of art and the art market over the last 40 years,
seeking to define the paradoxes of present-day artistic
production, where imitation and rejection of the previous
generation co-exist. The work is a sophisticated video clip
that does not draw attention to its sophistication and with
which the artist impudently seeks to transcend the medium
and its historical principles in order to give back his
vision of the official world of art through his own
language.
For Tomàs Ochoa
(Ecuador, 1965), already present at the Venice Biennale
in 2003, narration – as an element of interpretive
involvement – is important. Here he presents the work
The Darkroom – 6m m3, made in 2004. Chronicle
of a real event, this filmic work tells of the arrogance of
political power, which – for purely macroeconomic reasons –
plans and starts to carry out the disappearance of the
entire village of Villa Potrerillos in the Andes in order to
construct a hydro-electric power station. The building of a
dam forces the exodus of a community and a micro-economic
system. As often happens in T.O.’s contextual works, his
militant political criticism places the spectator before the
arrogance of political power and before the cultural roots
which it is supposed to safeguard. More than a video this
work (31’) is the documentary version of an important
historical event, namely the violent uprooting and
annihilation of a culture, and the traumatic effect of
interaction with reality. Technically sophisticated and
cleverly edited, the work highlights the qualities and the
communicative peculiarities of an artist who calls into the
question the status of the artist inside a sociological
culture.
The exhibition is
open to the public until 25 June 2006 (Friday to Sunday
from 2 pm to 6 pm or by appointment).
[translation Ian
Harvey]
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Teresa
Margolles, bano, video still, 2004 (courtesy galerie
peter kilchmann, zürich). |