‘The City’ through the works of Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa at Parasol Unit Foundation,

by Brit Es Magazine

Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art, presents a solo exhibition of works by Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa. Showing here in London for the first time in a public institution, Carlos Garaicoa reflects upon ‘the city’ – its limitations, potential and possibilities – as a physical infrastructure, social network and political space in this exhibition comprised of large-scale installations, sculptures, video and photography.

In the dimly lit ground floor gallery of Parasol unit is the provocative Fin de silencio (End of Silence), 2010, a body of work that combines both tapestry and video installation. Appropriating pavement signs of former department stores on the streets of Havana, Garaicoa turns digital photographic images into carpets that visitors can walk across.* Weaving a critical response to the reality of present-day Cuba through the poetic discourse across these jacquard-loom tapestries, the work reveals a dichotomy between these once magnificent terrazzo floors and ‘decadent’ stores (many of which are closed today) and their fall into neglect and ruin. Pitting utopian ideologies against dystopian ruins, repression against expression, the local against the global, Garaicoa’s investigation of the urban environment is built on dualities.

In a small side-room off the ground floor gallery, an installation of several black-and-white photographic diptychs showing dilapidated and demolished buildings in Havana, Cuba, correspond to architectural sculptures produced in crystal. Each pair of photographs emphasises the presence and subsequent absence of certain buildings in the city. The crystallised model becomes the physical yet ghostly rendering of a missing building, highlighting the deterioration and decay of the city due to government neglect, and thereby reveals the fragile line between utopia and reality.

Set into the ground of the gallery’s outdoor terrace is a series of bronze manhole covers, Sin título (Alcantarillas) [Untitled (Manhole Covers)], 2014, which mirror the critical discourse displayed on placards during political protests. Garaicoa appropriates these transitory gestures of urban language, gives them a material solidity, and locates them to be seen and walked over daily by pedestrians.

In the first floor gallery space, eight large diptychs of Cerámicas Porno-indignadas (Porn-Outraged Ceramics), 2012–2014, line the walls. In each diptych, one part presents a photograph of the original early twentieth-century painted tile advertisements on the exterior walls of a single pharmacy, the Farmacia Juanse in central Madrid. Ironically, playing with the inversion of the original and the copy, Garaicoa fabricates the copy as a physical object by printing on ceramic tiles saturated with references to specific moments and incidents throughout Spanish political history, such as corruption, abortion law, sexual liberties and the legalisation of marijuana. By dismantling the context of these images, Garaicoa presents a new understanding of the city, provoking and challenging the potential for social change.

Curated by Dr Ziba Ardalan, Founder/Director of Parasol unit, the exhibition is accompanied by a tailored programme of educational events aimed at engaging the public.

* Before walking across the carpet, visitors are kindly requested to remove their shoes and wear the plastic foot covers provided. They must please keep hold of their shoes.

Carlos Garaicoa was born in Havana, Cuba, in 1967. He lives and works in both Madrid and Havana. Garaicoa has participated in international art events including: the Havana Biennale; the Shanghai Biennale, the Biennale of São Paulo, the Venice Biennale, the Moscow Biennale, the Yokohama Triennial and the Echigo-Tsumari Triennale in Japan; the Johannesburg Biennale; the Liverpool Biennale; Documenta 11 and 14, Kassel; the Auckland Triennale; Photoespaña 12, Madrid and Trienal Poli | Gráfica de San Juan. Garaicoa’s works have also been presented in important institutions, such as: Fondazione Merz, Turin (2017–18), MAAT, Lisbon (2017); Azkuna Zentroa, Bilbao (2017); Villa Stuck Museum, Munich (2016); Fundación Botín, Santander (2014); Guggenheim Museum New York and Bilbao (2011); Tate Modern London and Tate Liverpool (2011); Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield, UK (2005); Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston (2002); Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía Madrid (2000); Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli (2000), the Kunsthalle in Vienna (1999); and the Centro Wilfredo Lam de Cuba, Havana (1995).

Image © Carlos Garaicoa, ‘Porn Outraged Ceramics Provocation’. Courtesy of Parasol Unit


Exhibition: Carlos Garaicoa
Parasol Unit, 14 Wharf Road, London N1 7RW
13 April – 20 July 2018

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