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Showing posts with label ALLORA & CALZADILLA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ALLORA & CALZADILLA. Show all posts

21.9.15

DIA ART FOUNDATION | ALLORA & CALZADILLA


<p>Allora & Calzadilla,<i> Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos)</i>, 2015. <br>Guayanilla–Peñuelas, Puerto Rico. © Allora & Calzadilla. Photo: Myritza Castillo</p>
Allora & Calzadilla, Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos), 2015. 
Guayanilla–Peñuelas, Puerto Rico. © Allora & Calzadilla. Photo: Myritza Castillo




Allora & Calzadilla
Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) 

Opening: September 23, 2015

Puerto Rico

www.diaart.org




Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla | Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) 

September 23, 2015 - September 23, 2017


Opening on September 23, 2015, the autumnal equinox, Dia Art Foundation presents Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) (2015), a new long-term work by Allora & Calzadilla on the southern coast of Puerto Rico, inside a remote cave at El Convento Natural Protected Area.

Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) is the newest iteration in a series of system-based sculptures by Allora & Calzadilla. Central to this commission is a solar energy converter that captures and stores sunlight, which is then used to power Dan Flavin's Puerto Rican Light (to Jeanie Blake) (1965). For Dia's commission, the artists ambitiously expand this sculptural gesture by installing Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) in a cave in Puerto Rico. The journey is part of the viewer's experience, similar to other Dia sites, including Walter De Maria's The Lightning Field (1977) in New Mexico and Robert Smithson's Spiral Jetty (1970) in Utah.

Allora & Calzadilla address light (both natural and electrical), as well as its representations and meanings throughout modern history, within an environment that predates and may survive human civilization. Reminiscent of myths associated with the symbolism of the cave, Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) also directly addresses this natural setting as the scene of the first human artistic manifestations, which appeared in the form of cave paintings thousands of years ago.

"Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) demonstrates Dia's commitment to long-term commissions, which is at the center of our mission," said Jessica Morgan, Director, Dia Art Foundation. "It has been a privilege to work with Allora & Calzadilla in realizing this work, which explores the connections between body, space, time, energy, and environment."

Co-curated by Yasmil Raymond and Manuel Cirauqui, Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) is Dia's first long-term installation outside the continental United States since Joseph Beuys's 7000 Eichen (7000 Oaks) in Kassel, Germany, in 1982. This project is informed by Dia's commitment to Flavin, a core artist in Dia's collection. Major presentations of Flavin's light sculptures are on view at Dia:Beacon (Beacon, New York) and at the Dan Flavin Art Institute (Bridgehampton, New York).

Puerto Rican Light (Cueva Vientos) is organized in collaboration with Para la Naturaleza, the nonprofit unit of the Conservation Trust of Puerto Rico. A special thanks to the Museo de Arte de Ponce for their partnership.

Visitor Information
Guided visits for small groups are available Wednesday through Sunday at noon. Visits include a moderate hike and last approximately two hours. Arrangements will be made for school and special groups.

The work is situated between Guayanilla and Peñuelas, Puerto Rico.

Travel times by car are:
Ponce: 30 minutes
San Juan: 2 hours
Dorado: 2 hours, 45 minutes
Aguadilla: 1 hours, 30 minutes

Reservations are required. For more information, visit www.puertoricanlight.org.

Publication 
An illustrated publication will be available in winter 2016 in English and Spanish. It will investigate the work's creation and its place at the intersection of art history, environmentalism, philosophy, and scientific research.

Funding
Lead support is from project sponsors Robert and Encarnita Valdes Quinlan. Major support is provided by the Teiger Foundation. Generous support has been provided by the Diane and Bruce Halle Foundation and Dia's Commissioning Committee: Marguerite S. Hoffman, Fady Jameel, Jill and Peter Kraus, and Leslie and Mac McQuown. Additional support is provided by Tony Bechara, the Leon Levy Foundation, and Pedro Jimenez. Generous funding for the publication is provided by VIA Art Fund. Additional support is provided by Gladstone Gallery, New York and Brussels; Kurimanzutto, Mexico City; and Lisson Gallery, London and Milan.

Para la Naturaleza
Para la Naturaleza is dedicated to integrating society in the conservation of natural ecosystems. For more information, visit www.paralanaturaleza.org.

Dia Art Foundation
Dia Art Foundation is committed to initiating, supporting, presenting, and preserving extraordinary art projects. For more information, visit www.diaart.org.

Contact: press@diaart.org / T +212 293 5598




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Art_prospect

17.11.11

ALLORA & CALZADILLA | LISSON GALLERY

from lissongallery.com / press release

Lisson Gallery is pleased to present Allora & Calzadilla’s third solo show at the gallery ‘Vieques Videos 2003-2011’. Made over the course of a decade Returning a Sound (2004), Under Discussion (2005) and Half Mast/Full Mast (2010) are now shown here together for the first time. Each video addresses the complicated history of Vieques, an inhabited island of Puerto Rico that was used by the United States Navy as a bomb-testing range from 1941 until 2003. The Navy was forced to evacuate by a civil disobedience campaign waged by local residents, with supporters throughout the world. Allora & Calzadilla contributed to the visual culture of this campaign with a long-term, multi-sited project entitled ‘Landmark’, informed by the following questions: ‘How is land differentiated from other land by the way it is marked? Who decides what is worth preserving and what should be destroyed? What are strategies for reclaiming marked land? How does one articulate an ethics and politics of land use?’






In Vieques the future of the reclaimed land remains uncertain and largely insulated from democratic claims. Returning a Sound (2004) was made at the beginning of the process of demilitarisation, decontamination, and future development and at once celebrates a victory and registers its precariousness. The video addresses not only the landscape of Vieques, but also its soundscape, invoking the memory of the sonic violence of the bombing. It follows Homar, an activist, as he traverses the island on a moped with a trumpet welded to the muffler. The noise-reducing device is diverted from its original purpose: with every jolt of the road and spurt of the engine, the trumpet might summon up the siren of an ambulance, Luigi Russolo’s Futurist Intonarumori or experimental jazz. In his circuit Homar acoustically recapitulates areas of the island formerly exposed to ear-splitting detonations.



Scarred with bomb-craters and with its ecosystem contaminated, the former military land has been designated as a federal wildlife refuge. This designation entails further violence by marginalising the demands of island residents for decontamination and municipal management – the point of departure for Under Discussion (2005). An overturned conference table has been retrofitted with an engine and rudder grafted from a small fishing boat. A local activist uses the motorized table to lead viewers around the restricted area of the island, re-marking the antagonisms that haunt the picturesque coast and bearing witness to the memory of the Fisherman’s Movement, which initiated the first acts of civil disobedience against the ecological fall-out of the bombing. The hybrid device explores the absurd political inequalities of the situation: the table, a common trope for the non-violent resolution of conflict, is forcibly reliant on local navigation.



Half Mast\Full Mast (2010) draws attention to the unfinished political, economic, and ecological reconstruction of the island as inhabitants grapple with the legacy of military occupation. Departing from the noisy dynamism of the earlier videos, Half Mast\Full Mast adopts a slower, more meditative approach. Projected at life-size, the silent video is comprised of 19 partitions; each is split into two landscape views of various sites in Vieques, stacked on top of one another. The horizontal divide is then crossed by two poles, aligned as if a continuous object. In each partition a young man hoists himself up the pole from standing to a horizontal position, and with intenseexertion momentarily becomes an unofficial flag – before endurance gives way to gravity. The gesture functions to reframe specific sites around Vieques significant to the military occupation and subsequent struggles in terms of a deceptively simple semiotic convention: the flying of the flag at half-mast (a sign of mourning) or full- mast (‘normal’ conditions). In ‘becoming’ a flag, however unofficial, absurd or precarious, the performers short-circuit the flag’s symbolic relation between parts and wholes. In Half Mast\Full Mast, the individual body ‘literally’ stands in for the flag, obliterating it as an official place for the collective body of the nation.



Alternating in an unpredictable manner between upper and lower segments of the composition, the appearance sometimes celebrates or salutes a particular site (such as places related to the history of civil disobedience), while in others it indicates a sense of discontent, if not crisis (such as the luxury W hotel recently constructed in Vieques). In other instances, the gesture is ambivalent relative to the sites in question, suspended somewhere between disaster and progress, oblivion and memory, grief and hope – oscillations that rebound on a broader scale between all three Vieques videos.

Allora & Calzadilla
Vieques Videos 2003–2011
23 November 2011 – 14 January 2012

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Lisson Gallery
52-54 Bell Street
London, NW1 5DA
T: + 44(0)20 7724 2739
F: + 44(0)20 7724 7124

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SELECTED / EXHIBITION / ALLORA & CALZADILLA / VIEQUES VIDEOS 2003/2011 @ LISSONGALLERY.COM