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Galeria tomas march: Federico Guzman. (Reviews).


With so many works taking the body as the basis of their aesthetic discourse, it comes as a relief to find an artist who reflects on other living materials. Federico Guzman deals with plants as organic beings on which humankind has left a considerable imprint. In doing so, he works to dismantle aspects of the Western idea of the Americas, constructed in part through European botanical expeditions of past centuries. The graphic representation of American flora was born of an error: the idea of exploration, that is, the discovery of "new" species (ones unknown to Europe).

Guzman attempts to represent plants in all their diverse aspects, using large-format watercolors, canvases, photographs, and drawings. Among them is Yage, 2000, depicting the climbing liana liana (lēä`nə) or liane (lēän`), name for any climbing plant that roots in the ground.  that is recognized in Amazonia as a medicine and plant of knowledge. Guzman has painted it from a photograph taken in Colombia. The work's full title lists more than eighty names, which is telling: What enormous importance this plant--considered sacred--has had. In Achiote a·chi·o·te  
n.
See annatto.



[American Spanish, from Nahuatl achiotl.]
, 2000, Guzman takes a botanical illustration Botanical illustration is the term for the scientific depiction of plants, for the purpose of identification. The work may be be appealing, but is primarily intended to assist in the identification of the plant described.  from the eighteenth century and distorts it by superimposing onto it the pigment of the plant itself, which certain indigenous communities used to paint their skin during celebrations. By smearing the image fabricated fab·ri·cate  
tr.v. fab·ri·cat·ed, fab·ri·cat·ing, fab·ri·cates
1. To make; create.

2. To construct by combining or assembling diverse, typically standardized parts:
 in the books, Guzman tries to return to the image of the plant its actual properties.

The most extensive series in this exhibition, composed of seven pieces, is called "Yerbas dulces" (Sweet herbs fragrant herbs cultivated for culinary purposes.

See also: Sweet
), 2001. Centered on canvases with white backgrounds are bare, schematic drawings of plants; along with these, in juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 fragments, Guzman has included news items from the Colombian press, as if he wanted nature and culture (be it a violent and exploitive one) to appear on a parallel plane. For example, texts about proceedings by a district attorney's office to investigate 190 notaries coexist co·ex·ist  
intr.v. co·ex·ist·ed, co·ex·ist·ing, co·ex·ists
1. To exist together, at the same time, or in the same place.

2.
 with the demands of indigenous communities: "The p'was consider the exploitation of petroleum to be detrimental to their culture," reads one of the reports from the newspaper. Drug crops also exist and are discussed, for instance the use of cocaine for medical purposes. Here resides another truth about plants and their functions: the richness that sprouts forth from them, their curative curative /cur·a·tive/ (kur´ah-tiv) tending to overcome disease and promote recovery.

cu·ra·tive
adj.
1. Serving or tending to cure.

2.
 properties.

Photography, along with painting and drawing, helps the artist on his way through a world that refutes the order and harmony of logic-centered mentalities. In one image may be detected amid some leafy vegetation a man whose face we do not see; his crippled hands seem to graze some coca leaves. In another photograph somebody has arranged clusters of shrubs and herbs on a page of a newspaper. To whom do these belong? What use can they be given? We do not know. We are too accustomed to immediate responses in a world that refuses to hear the vital and uncontrollable murmur murmur /mur·mur/ (mur´mer) [L.] an auscultatory sound, particularly a periodic sound of short duration of cardiac or vascular origin.

anemic murmur  a cardiac murmur heard in anemia.
 of nature. This is what Guzman appears to propose as the object of artistic knowledge and reflection.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Article Details
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Author:Aliaga, Juan Vicente
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:3COLO
Date:Jun 22, 2001
Words:481
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