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"Carne viva": Museo de Arte del Centro cultural de San Marcos.


There are instances when life manages to imitate art without recycling cliches, and this exhibition was a fine example. Last August, the Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its report on the tragic results of two decades of political violence in Peru, which, it is now known, claimed twice as many lives than the original highest estimate. "Carne viva: Partes de guerra 1980-2003" (Raw Flesh: Fragments of War 1980-2003), which opened before the report was published, provided artistic evidence for this violence by showing work with overt and covert political content by fourteen contemporary Peruvian artists This is a list of contemporary Peruvian painters:
  • Pablo Amaringo
  • Daniel Hernández (painter)
  • Hugo Orellana Bonilla
  • Mario Urteaga Alvarado
  • Carlos Morales (artist)
  • Carlos Enrique Polanco
  • Diego Quispe Tito
  • Jorge Vinatea Reinoso
  • José Sabogal
. The curator, Gustavo Buntinx, started with the premise that indirect forms of resistance and underground activity, such as art, could counter political persecution. The best political art is never simply an illustration of a given event but aims instead at demystifying history and reflecting broader feelings, such as fear.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

To suggest that the roots of political violence in Peru lie deep in the past, the exhibition included a large multipanel painting, Peru, pais del manana ma·ña·na  
adv.
1. Tomorrow.

2. At an unspecified future time.

n.
An indefinite time in the future.



[Spanish, from Vulgar Latin
 (Proyecto para hacer un mural, cuando tenga el dinero, manana) (Peru, the Country of Tomorrow [Project for the Making of a Mural When I Have the Money, Tomorrow]), 1981, by Juan Javier Salazar, which consists of forty-two portraits of Peruvian presidents from 1821 to 1980. Executed in a crude style and based on popular schoolbook illustrations, each image is inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 with the word MANANA (tomorrow), thus alluding to the political rhetoric that so often invokes the future as synonymous with synonymous with
adjective equivalent to, the same as, identical to, similar to, identified with, equal to, tantamount to, interchangeable with, one and the same as
 freedom and prosperity. Needless to say, manana never comes.

The exhibition argued that the challenge to repressive governments takes on various forms. Cuco Morales's Ejercito rosa (Pink Army), ca. 1993--a miniature altarpiece altarpiece

Painting, relief, sculpture, screen, or decorated wall standing on or behind an altar in a Christian church. The images depict holy personages, saints, and biblical subjects.
 with a photograph of Sarita Colonia, who is revered among the Andean peoples as a saint though unrecognized by the Catholic hierarchy, surrounded by figurines of toy soldiers painted pink--suggested that sexual differences could be perceived as vehement, politically charged protest, because totalitarianism suppresses any departure from uniformity. Morales's message seemed straightforward: In the absence of full democracy, the gay identity is often considered as subversive as political dissent Political dissent refers to any expression designed to convey dissatisfaction with or opposition to the policies of a governing body. Such expression may take forms from vocal disagreement to civil disobedience to the use of violence. ; when presented in art it can be a form of radicalism.

Oppressive regimes always look for aesthetics appropriate to their needs, and "Carne viva" indirectly commented on that aspect of ideology in an intriguing way by including works that referenced art aimed at disruption of the artistic continuum. Fernando Guerra Garcia echoed Duchamp's Etant donnes, 1946-66, in which the French artist returned unexpectedly to illusionistic art, turning it into a voyeuristic experience. In Garcia's El ultimo ul·ti·mo  
adv. Abbr. ult.
In or of the month before the present one.



[Latin ultim (m
 partido, por celebracion del gol por muerte subita (The Last Game, Due to the Celebration of a Score in Sudden Death), 1997, the viewer was asked to peek through peepholes into a reconstruction of the room in which the fourteen rebel guerrillas who occupied the Japanese embassy in Lima between December 1996 and April 1997 were all killed. The gray stone walls allude to allude to
verb refer to, suggest, mention, speak of, imply, intimate, hint at, remark on, insinuate, touch upon see see, elude
 the sacrificial sac·ri·fi·cial  
adj.
Of, relating to, or concerned with a sacrifice: a sacrificial offering.



sac
 pre-Hispanic god Chavin de Huantar Chavín de Huán·tar  

A major center of Chavin civilization in the northern highlands of Peru, noted for its temple complex and stylized stone carvings.
, known for his cruelty. The dead bodies have been removed; the only sign of human presence is a soccer ball, with which the rebels were playing when they were killed. Looking through the peephole, we witness--as Buntinx hoped we would--a moment in the revolution of the imagination, expressed in a work of one of the fourteen artists who refused to be silenced.
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Title Annotation:Lima
Author:Bartelik, Marek
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:563
Previous Article:Eugenia Butler: Ben Maltz Gallery, Otis College of Art & Design.(Los Angeles)
Next Article:Joao Onofre: Centro Galego de Arte Contemporanea.(Santiago de Compostela)



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