Vista de la exhibición, galería PM8, Vigo, España.
Residual
Residual, is the second solo project by Adán Vallecillo (Danlí, Honduras,
1977) at PM8, a new body of work developed in Venice during the Residency
illySustainArt & Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa at the end of 2013. This
specific proposal is articulated around a group of pieces which manifest Adán
́s concern with the deteriorated fragility of a city loaded with many
contradictions, and whose urban-architectural decadence is an external sign of
its inner boredom.
After participating in La Biennale de Venezia 2011, the new encounter with this
overwhelming environment implies a new experience which turns into a particular
journey. A personal voyage which started under the spell and weight of
centuries of history and art but which also walked with gravity through its
real social conflicts.
Adan ́s exploratory and performative practice lead him to analyze in depth this
new context, which although very different from his own, presented quite a few
coincidences with the situation he left behind in his country. The artist has
frequently been interested in social and political issues in order to create a
critical discourse, but also in an effort to generate an honest analytical
thinking through his work. His recurrent interest in the social dissensions he
observes in society is reflected once again in this new project, but here the
artist can not escape the sensorial influence of the city, every piece is
impregnated by its atmosphere, its light, its colors, and also by the
oppressive sense of its tradition which is heavily grounded in its core.
Adán focused the attention of his investigations on the covert context of the
place. With sharp precision he scanned the social deficiencies which seem
evident to him and are visible for everyone. Disharmony unobserved by most of
the visitors who seem blinded by the many architectural wonders found in their
arranged itineraries. Upon his arrival, the artist felt instantly attracted by
what Venice got rid of: the people, mostly illegal immigrants, who sold goods
on the street and to whom he soon started to converse with, the litter left by
hordes of tourists who erode the city in a never-ending procession walking to
the most must-see places, and finally by other remains he finds in diverse
streets, historical buildings and different corners of the urban landscape, in
an attempt to give visibility to all these hidden layers of the city.
Therefore the haunting figure of Venice as an excuse to look into the roots of
a system which is perpetuating an invariable urban structure which doesn ́t fit
the needs of its real population. A place bewitched by the transcendence of his
cultural legacy but unable to deal with the vertiginous pace of the present,
the hunger of the travellers and the many requirements expected by its
temporary visitors ready to consume just another product. During his Venetian
itinerary Adán read some of the writings by Wolfgang Scheppe, being specially
influenced by one of his most ambitious books, Migropolis, a work in which the
philosopher analyses the contradictions of Venice and its further development
towards a place of mass consumerism.
Tourists in Venice don ́t usually go to other areas outside places which
everyone recognizes, they don ́t want to know the reality of the city, the
truth behind the curtain, they want to experience the idea of what Venice is or
should be, but not what the real Venice is. Adán as a visitor and as a
foreigner perceives another truth, sees other parallel worlds which lay there
in the decor of this shadowy theater, whose history seems to have been fused
into an element of pure appearance. A place which in his long drift has almost
become a brand without identity, a sort of theme park which diminishes its real
soul and humanistic importance.
We might say that the project Adán Vallecillo made in Venice is a metaphor of
what ́s happening in our society, we live through standard cliches, we create a
facade without wanting to go any further. What matters is the souvenir of the
experience, not the experience itself. We don ́t have time. We rush emotionally
and physically building a fictitious reality, which might fit this ideal
imposed by the social media and other forces of our society.
Francisco Salas
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