Projects: Carolina Caycedo and David de Rozas
How can a region's past, present, and future be in conversation? This question animates the work of Carolina Caycedo and David de Rozas, which focuses on the struggles for territorial sovereignty, Indigenous rights, and the building of environmental memory. The multimedia works featured in this Projects installation grow out of years-long research into an area that the Carrizo/Comecrudo tribe calls Somi S鈥檈k, which includes parts of Southwest Texas, Northern Mexico, and the Rio Grande Valley. Caycedo and de Rozas make visible the stories and voices鈥攂oth human and non-human鈥攖hat have shaped this complex landscape, and the ways in which they have been affected by the built environment, from land privatization to the construction of dams, oil sites, and border walls.
Narrated by Juan Mancias, chairman of the Carrizo/Comecrudo, the exhibition鈥檚 video installation, The Teachings of the Hands, highlights the tribe鈥檚 philosophies and focuses on its struggle to maintain its culture and way of life. Accompanying the video is a hanging sculpture鈥擬easuring the Immeasurable鈥攎ade with objects used to survey and map land. Originally commissioned by Ballroom Marfa, a contemporary art museum in Texas, these works advocate for a geography that centers human beings鈥 connection to their environment and to other species. Together with a series of 1930s watercolor reproductions of key pictographic sites in Somi S鈥檈k, they also act as an acknowledgment of the enduring Indigenous presence in the region.
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How can a region's past, present, and future be in conversation? This question animates the work of Carolina Caycedo and David de Rozas, which focuses on the struggles for territorial sovereignty, Indigenous rights, and the building of environmental memory. The multimedia works featured in this Projects installation grow out of years-long research into an area that the Carrizo/Comecrudo tribe calls Somi S鈥檈k, which includes parts of Southwest Texas, Northern Mexico, and the Rio Grande Valley. Caycedo and de Rozas make visible the stories and voices鈥攂oth human and non-human鈥攖hat have shaped this complex landscape, and the ways in which they have been affected by the built environment, from land privatization to the construction of dams, oil sites, and border walls.
Narrated by Juan Mancias, chairman of the Carrizo/Comecrudo, the exhibition鈥檚 video installation, The Teachings of the Hands, highlights the tribe鈥檚 philosophies and focuses on its struggle to maintain its culture and way of life. Accompanying the video is a hanging sculpture鈥擬easuring the Immeasurable鈥攎ade with objects used to survey and map land. Originally commissioned by Ballroom Marfa, a contemporary art museum in Texas, these works advocate for a geography that centers human beings鈥 connection to their environment and to other species. Together with a series of 1930s watercolor reproductions of key pictographic sites in Somi S鈥檈k, they also act as an acknowledgment of the enduring Indigenous presence in the region.
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The Museum of Modern Art announces Projects: Carolina Caycedo and David de Rozas, on view in the Museum鈥檚 street-level gallery from June 18, 2022, through January 2, 2023.
The Museum of Modern Art announces Projects: Carolina Caycedo and David de Rozas, on view in the Museum鈥檚 street-level gallery from June 18, 2022, through January 2, 2023.