Regina José Galindo
ESTOY VIVA
25.03 - 08.06.2014
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In a crowded Pavilion of Contemporary Art during the opening evening on 24 March, Regina José Galindo performed Exhalación (estoy viva)  a new intense and poetic action, suspended between life and death, with great emotional involvement by the participants.

 

The new performance was conceived for the exhibition Estoy Viva, the first and most complete exhibition of Regina José Galindo’s artworks ever done before, open till 8 June, promoted by Milan Council for Culture, produced by PAC and Civita and curated by Diego Sileo and Eugenio Viola.

 

A scenario suspended between the imaginary and the symbolic welcomed the audience. A totally white room was specially constructed in the ground floor of the Pavilion in Milan. Inside, behind a closed door, Regina José Galindo lied naked, on a sort of tombstone. The temperature was low, as in a morgue. One person at a time had access to the artist. A mirror was given to each person: placing it close to Galindo’s nostrils, the visitors were able to carry away her breath clouding on the surface, the only sign that contradicted all the symptoms of an apparent death.

 

Regina José Galindo (Guatemala City, 1974) is one of the most representative artists of the magmatic Latin American continent. She uses her body in a political and critical way, as a tool for reawakening the removed traumas, the torments of the memories, and the ruins of history.

 

Starting from the microcosm of her country, Guatemala, perpetually experiencing instability and violence, the artist creates uncomfortable works, often brutal, where her tiny body, apparently fragile, is exposed to a series of public actions using the metaphorical space given by art to denounce the ethical implications of social and cultural injustices, discriminations of race and sex, and, more in general, all kinds of abuses stemming from power.

Galindo explores her body, turning it into a tool of symbolic recall of events that involve the collective body, the so-called “social body”. Her actions, involving her completely, on one side reiterate the artist’s engagement in the expression of our dramatic present by means of violence and pain, and on the other explicit a sense of deep impotence that hits both artist and viewers.

 

Suspended between life and death, Galindo experiences fear, anguish and their consequences, taking in her own body the physical and psychological risk, up to almost intolerable situations. Her radical and dramatic actions always focus on surprisingly critical events and become a way to redefine, one more time, the feeble boundaries between art and life.

 

Estoy Viva is divided in five sections, conceived as permeable categories interconnected: Politics, Woman, Violence, Organic and Death. Five macro thematic emergencies present an open view over the artistic experience of Regina José Galindo. An itinerary builds through short circuits and slippage, from the origins till today, where some of her best known and emblematic actions such as ¿Quién puede borrar las huellas? (Who can erase the traces?, 2003), Himenoplastia (2004), Mientras, ellos siguen libres (While they are still free, 2007) and Caparazon (Shell, 2010) are presented side by side with more recent works never seen before in Italy such as Marabunta and Joroba (Hump, 2011), Descensión (Descent, 2013) or La Verdad (The Truth, 2013).

 

The research of Regina José Galindo, focused on subjects connected with violence, rights privation and individual freedom, involves both men and women of every continent. For this reason the exhibition is supporting with a donation ticket Amnesty International, the independent, self-financed, non-governmental Organization that since 1961 defends human rights wherever they are violated.

 

THE EXHIBITION MOVIE

For the exhibition the PAC asked to Cosimo Alemà, successful young Italian director of movies as At the end of the day (2010) and La Santa (The Saint, 2014), to read the work of Regina José Galindo through a cinematographic approach and offer to the public the central meaning of the exhibition Estoy Viva by sound and image. Conceived in collaboration with the artist, and produced by 9.99 Films, the movie is a sensitive and involving prelude, an emotional key to understand the work of Regina José Galindo. 

 

Estoy Viva is organized with the contribution of TOD’S, sponsor of the yearly PAC exhibition activity, and the support of Vulcano.

 

The exhibition catalogue, edited by Diego Sileo and Eugenio Viola, is published by Skira. It includes two essays written by the two curators and a text by Emanuela Borzacchiello, expert of Latin-American history and gender studies.

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