this is not archaeology | colección patricia phelps de cisneros

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25/04/15 21:25 This is Not Archaeology | Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Página 1 de 13 http://www.coleccioncisneros.org/editorial/cite-site-sights/not-archaeology This is Not Archaeology Notes on the Peruvian desert MAY 14, 2014 LIMA — Lima sprawls over an arid landscape—between the ocean and the mountains—full of pre-hispanic remnants forgotten by modernity, that are now reappearing like palimpsests in the fog of a capital city that is characterized by its historic fusion. The city’s and its culture’s complexity, the successive layers established within a territory, determine the concerns about territory, identity and the value of objects in our culture. Huaca Pucllana, distrito de Miraflores, Lima. Photo: Elena Damiani Lima’s intricate and singular urban agglomeration is conformed by huacas (archeological sites such as temples and other sacred spaces) that are found among residential areas—concrete buildings that announce the economic prosperity of the last decade, and improvised or partially completed structures, crystallizing multiple identities in a difficult-to-define panorama. How is our understanding of the urban fabric constructed in a city where historical sites emerge or disintegrate within a multiplicity of buildings? Cite, Site, Sights

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  • 25/04/15 21:25This is Not Archaeology | Coleccin Patricia Phelps de Cisneros

    Pgina 1 de 13http://www.coleccioncisneros.org/editorial/cite-site-sights/not-archaeology

    This is Not ArchaeologyNotes on the Peruvian desertMAY 14, 2014

    LIMA Lima sprawls over an arid landscapebetween the ocean and the mountainsfull of pre-hispanic remnants

    forgotten by modernity, that are now reappearing like palimpsests in the fog of a capital city that is characterized by its

    historic fusion. The citys and its cultures complexity, the successive layers established within a territory, determine the

    concerns about territory, identity and the value of objects in our culture.

    Huaca Pucllana, distrito de Miraflores, Lima. Photo: Elena Damiani

    Limas intricate and singular urban agglomeration is conformed by huacas (archeological sites such as temples and other

    sacred spaces) that are found among residential areasconcrete buildings that announce the economic prosperity of the

    last decade, and improvised or partially completed structures, crystallizing multiple identities in a difficult-to-define

    panorama. How is our understanding of the urban fabric constructed in a city where historical sites emerge or disintegrate

    within a multiplicity of buildings?

    Cite,Site,Sights

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    There are various artists whose practices share similarities with spatial-temporal research about understanding the

    landscape as a territory full of the pasts reverberations. In their work, retrospection is not an exercise for reconstruction, but

    rather to represent, save for the stereotypical forms or idealizations that museumize the pastmodern dangers that are

    very popular in countries such as ours, where the past is frequently used to nurture an identity based on ancestral roots.

    The exhibitions Ruins in Reverse (organized by the Tate Modern and MALI) and Todo lo slido (Everything Solid) by IosuAramburu describe a territory where ruinsarcheological or contemporaryare the starting point to create fictions orimages that fluctuate between an ancestral past and an uncertain future.

    Ruins in Reverse at MALI (Museo de Arte de Lima), 2013. Estructuras conjugadas by Jos Carlos Martinat. Gold aluminum structure.

    Image: Musuk Nolte. Courtesy of the artist and MALI

    In the exhibition Doble Horizonte (Double Horizon), Alejandro Jaime proposes to recognize the city of Lima as a livingmemory, stripped of the solemnity and historical distance with which we have been taught. Using formal and conceptual

    relationships, Jaime considers the huaca as an intermediary state between two places that he identifies as landmarks of

    power: the Cerro San Cristbal and the Government Palace.

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    Alejandro Jaime, Horizonte Intermedio I, 2013. Ink, pencil and oil on paper. Courtesy of the artist.

    Alejandro Jaime, Doble Horizonte II, 2013. Dirt, clay. Courtesy of the artist.

    Armando Andrade Tudelas work transcribes landscapes to 16mm film to transport the spectator to places with collectivesignificance to reflect on the role of objects and the processes of constructing meaning within our culture. In the film

    Marcahuasi, the camera meanders through a forest of rocks located to the east of Lima, where the natural geological

    formations act like sculptures. In this way, he formulates questions regarding how objects are classified and how they

    acquire significance in the history of art.

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    Armando Andrade Tudela, Marcahuasi, 2010. 16mm transfered to digital, 10.37 mins. Courtesy of the artist

    Armando Andrade Tudela, Marcahuasi, 2010. 16mm transfered to digital, 10.37 mins. Courtesy of the artist

    Armando Andrade Tudela, Sin Ttulo (MX) 2. Concrete, plexiglass, ratan, aluminum. Courtesy of the artist

    Ishmael Randall Weeks constructs a model of bricks and wooden stretcherssimilar in form to the pre-Columbiandwellings in the coasts of Peruwhich are later eroded with sand. Huaca appears to be a maquette where the dialogue

    between construction and deconstruction, permanence and dissipation, converge to create a view of what could be a

    dystopian city full of niches, or a lonely building in ruins that rests on the ground.

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    Ishmael Randall Weeks, Huaca, 2010. Eroded bricks, wooden stretchers. Courtesy of the artist

    Ishmael Randall Weeks, Quoin, 2013. Newspaper, photo transfers on intervened paper, wood table. Courtesy of the artist

    The contemporary ruin also serves as a tool to articulate questions about permanence and the ephemeral character of man-

    made structures and the value of historic monuments. This is the case with the series Monuments by Pablo Hare, who

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    documents the wave of new, ludicrous monuments erected over the past two decades in Peru. The series includes a

    dinosaur in the desert, and a statue of Miguel Grau that looks out to the Pacific from the Ancash beachesall part of a

    symbolic vocabulary that becomes a social and popular narrative in public spaces.

    Pablo Hare, Monumentos. Giganotosaurus, Valle de Majes, Arequipa, 2006. Courtesy of the artist

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    Pablo Hare, Monumentos. Abancay #2, Apurmac, 2010. Courtesy of the artist

    Pablo Hare, Monumentos. Miguel Grau, Baha Tortugas, Ancash, 2008. Courtesy of the artist

    The installation El Pueblo Libre by Raura Oblitas gathers a series of sculptures that, as structural elements of incompletebuildings, announce the failings of architectural projects that were paralyzed before completion.

    Raura Oblitas, El Pueblo Libre, 2013. Dyed wax on aluminum, concrete, corrugated steel, soldered metal. Courtesy of the artist and Galera

    80m2 Livia Benavides

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    Raura Oblitas, Autoridad y proteccin, 2014. Soldered metal, concrete, dyed wax on aluminum. Courtesy of the artista and Galera 80m2

    Livia Benavides

    In recent years, Iosu Aramburu has been researching various ideas about constructed space, time, and modernity by lookingat architecture and how its conceived, built, transformed, and destroyed. In the series Fantasmagoras, the promise of the

    countrys modern project crumbles in front of us in ink drawings that illustrate the icons of contemporary Peruvian

    architecture, disappearing on paper.

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    Iosu Aramburu, Fantasmagora XLIII, 2014. Ink on paper. Courtesy of the artist

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    Iosu Aramburu, Fantasmagora XLVI, 2014. Ink on paper. Courtesy of the artist

    Whether by taking archeological sites or urban ruins as a starting point, these practices look at the past to examine and

    rewrite concerns that are embedded in deep layers of our culture. Their representations are far from nostalgic searches that

    attempt to rescue time past. On the contrary, they are proposals that allow space for new questions about the territorys

    surface.

    Workshops: Art, inter-subjectivity and learning2 comments 6 months ago

    Carolina Castro Jorquera Estimada Mnica, como tumisma lo has dicho es interesante la apreciacin que haceSofa

    Geometry at the Limit1 comment 6 months ago

    Abstractart Lesson I instantly fell in love with thisimage. Powerful.

    How Do You Box Air?1 comment 6 months ago

    Sofia Amazing, great production, and educational.Congrats to the CPPC team.

    Las utopas estn destinadas a fracasar1 comment 10 months ago

    Ileen Kohn I do not necessarily agree that people wouldnever wait in line to see a Geometric Abstraction show -witness

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    Pgina 11 de 13http://www.coleccioncisneros.org/editorial/cite-site-sights/not-archaeology

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    Pgina 12 de 13http://www.coleccioncisneros.org/editorial/cite-site-sights/not-archaeology

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  • 25/04/15 21:25This is Not Archaeology | Coleccin Patricia Phelps de Cisneros

    Pgina 13 de 13http://www.coleccioncisneros.org/editorial/cite-site-sights/not-archaeology

    Is Abstraction the New Muralism?

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