André Magaña “Date Poder”

King's Leap

poster for André Magaña “Date Poder”
[Image: André Magaña "Formita Sagradita Donjulitito" Nylon fibers, enamel, epoxy-finished thermoplastic, 15 x 11 x 10 in.]

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In Date Poder, Andre Magaña presents new sculptures that blur the lines between colonial perspectives, popular culture, and traditional Mexican-American visual histories. Using commercially available fabrication and sculpture techniques, Magaña reconsiders the social and material weight that consumables and foods impart in the perpetuation of colonialism and the formation of Mexican-American identity.

Inside the gallery are nine low relief sculptures appearing to be in a state of semi-storage or disarray, staggered, composed, leaned, and hung. The pieces are “softened” replicas of Emperador cookies, a product manufactured by Gamesa, Mexico’s largest manufacturer of shelf-stable cookies and a subsidiary of PepsiCo. These cheap snacks use the aesthetics and language of the Empire, (which bring with it colonialism, white supremacy, and militarism) to signal power and desire. The marketing strategy and language around Emperador products reinforces this by using hybrid “Ibero-Trojan” warriors as proxies for the product. The mascots, and the cookies, are framed as aspirational: objects that can be consumed for power. The title of the exhibition, also a slogan used by Emperador in ad campaigns throughout the late 2010s, translates to “give yourself power” or “empower yourself.” The branding of the product aligns power, and the sweetness of the cookie, with whiteness, plunder, and colonization.

Scaled up and finished in auto-body paint, the modeled Emperador cookies are reinscribed with the violence embedded into the marketing of the cookie. Strewn across the floor of the gallery are other enlarged confections of now-ubiquitous symbols of Mexican Culture: Conchas, makeshift Raspado syrup dispensers, Pelon Pelo Rico, and a Don Julio bottle. These loaded signs, emptied of their natural colors, sugary contents, or intoxicating effects, direct the physical reality of how colonial perspectives prescribe identities. Magañas’ chosen medium, that of 3D printing digital designs and slowly building up sculptural layers until they no longer resemble their plastic origins, operates in parallel to their representative content, enacting a real-time slowing down of contemporary material production. For Magaña, the animation of these sculptures, and their ability to resist the social conditions of burdened histories, situate a practice grounded in an imagined future where colonial power is replaced with a memorialization of survival.

This exhibition was realized in part with the support of Triangle Arts Association in Brooklyn, New York, where Magaña was an artist-in-residence from September - November 2020.

André Magaña (b. 1992, Lagunitas, CA) is an artist based in Brooklyn, NY. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. In addition to his exhibition at King’s Leap, Magaña will present new work in Spring 2021 at Sculpture Center’s annual In Practice exhibition, You may go but this will bring you back, curated by Katherine Simóne Reynolds. Recent solo and two-person presentations include NADA Miami Beach 2019 with Magenta Plains, NY; Prairie, Chicago, IL; MONACO, St Louis, MO; Holding Contemporary, Portland, OR; and American Medium, New York, NY. Recent group exhibitions include SORBUS, Helsinki, FI; Vacation, New York, NY; Hotel Art Pavillion, Brooklyn, NY; Zilkha Gallery at Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT; and Alyssa Davis Gallery, New York, NY. He was a resident at Triangle Arts Association in Brooklyn, NY in 2020.

Media

Schedule

from February 20, 2021 to March 21, 2021

Opening Reception on 2021-02-20 from 13:00 to 19:00

Artist(s)

André Magaña

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