Patricia Esquivias Exhibition

Murray Guy

poster for Patricia Esquivias Exhibition

This event has ended.

Murray Guy presents the second solo exhibition with Patricia Esquivias. This show will feature the premiere of two video installations, Folklore III and Natures at the Hand.

Patricia Esquivias is a storyteller: she constructs narratives that simultaneously seem to coalesce into epiphany and unravel into slapstick. Both works in the show are promiscuous lectures that wander through images and texts and diverse media, where banal details are transformed into deep reflections on modernity, colonialism, and the natural world.

Folklore III, the newest of Esquivias’ series of works addressing Spanish culture, combines two narratives which relate Galicia, Spain, with Nueva Galicia, Mexico. The former is a region on the coast with a city called Finisterre (Land’s End), and the latter was a colonial territory renamed in its honor by the sixteenth century Spanish Queen Juana La Loca (Joanna the Mad.) The houses along the coast in “old” Galicia have been deeded a “right to fly,” meaning that they can expand in area as they grow in height, resulting in peculiar, inverted Aztec pyramids. Details entangle the viewer, including strange tiling and a Formica pattern that looks like an abstract computer rendering of the sea, and the narrator is caught between new and old Galicia, an end and a beginning, a beginning which becomes an end, and the “right to fly” granted by a supposedly insane queen.

Natures at the Hand is composed of three short videos in which Esquivias takes the hand as a metonymy for an encounter with the natural world—a bizarre “grasping” of nature. In the first segment, fingers light matches, one after the other, as the bursts of flame reveal a series of matchboxes with stylized depictions of animals. The second is a comic attempt to read photographs of ornate topiary, drawn from images of European palaces, onto sculpted urban plants in Guadalajara, Mexico. The third shows the artist throwing a basketball against a glass window at the slowly setting sun, rhythmically, perhaps even dialectically, negating the fading light.

Alongside this show, Esquivias’ video The Future Was When?, a brilliant reflection revolving around tiles in the New York and Madrid subways, will be on view in the exhibition “Nachleben” at the Goethe Institut Wyoming Building, 5 East 3rd Street, New York, from 5 May – 29 May.

Patricia Esquivias (b. 1979) lives and works in Madrid, Spain and Guadalajara, Mexico.

Media

Schedule

from May 08, 2010 to June 12, 2010
Sunday, May 9 at 3pm: screening and discussion with Patricia Esquivias and curators Fionn Meade and Manuela Moscoso.

Opening Reception on 2010-05-08 from 18:00 to 20:00

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