SACO9 Now or never

Page 14

THE PARADOX OF AWAKENING | SACO Team Crises present a tremendous opportunity to analyze the future from different points of view, with the hope of not making the same mistakes again. Paradoxes that we hadn’t seen before become clear as soon as that normalcy that so many insist on talking about, as if it were some sort of oasis (or mirage) that we must reach for safety, begins to blur. Since October 2019, the nationwide popular uprising has caused us to reflect on society in all its aspects: our own private lives and personal matters, human relationships, politics, labor systems and the economy. In the case of SACO, it meant getting back to thinking about art as part of the social fabric of our territories. On top of that is the enormous impact of the COVID-19 epidemic, which has crossed all physical, mental and spiritual boundaries in a way that forces us to reflect on what we want for our lives and societies. Like the way the popular uprising changed art, ways of speaking and symbolizing, or how certain artistic actions reached out to the masses, how groups of neighbors or protestors identified with certain artistic expressions and then made them their own. And yet it was nothing new. “Los pingüinos” had already danced “Thriller” a million times outside of La Moneda presidential palace, and long before that, some of the family members of political prisoners who had gone missing during the dictatorship started dancing la cueca sola dressed in black and white, with the photos of the disappeared clutched to their chest. In the past year, performances in the midst of protests have become commonplace, and in a way, we have gotten used to finding art in places other than galleries and museums: on walls, in plazas and on the street. Art that has stood apart from the establishment, going viral and becoming mainstream, even drawing the interest of academia and the media. And then the apocalypse came and sent us all home. It seemed like an act of collusion from the powers that be, for its violent and crushing modus operandi. Satisfying merely one’s basic necessities became the mark of responsible maturity. We stopped getting together, not to mention greeting each other with a kiss on the cheek. Casual strolls turned into secret meetings. We stopped living in order to survive. Museums, galleries, cinemas, and theaters turned off their lights and closed their doors. From their homes, those in charge of art mediation tried to convince us that we could do everything through virtual reality. But the truth is that we have grown tired and numb looking at social media. Only live contact without any reviews or pauses, only laughter without the mute button, and art without “likes” will wake us up.

12


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

En la noche es pájaro, polilla, viento o silencio | Elisa Montesinos

1min
pages 228-231

Residencia pandémica | Simon Van Parys

10min
pages 232-244

Una trampa para el tiempo | Elia Gasparolo y Santiago Rey

2min
pages 224-227

Delusión | Jordán Plaza

1min
pages 220-223

Bitácora de un olvido | Felipe Muñoz

0
pages 217-219

Residencia en la residencia | Elisa Montesinos

1min
page 216

La resurrección de los materiales | Iván Ávila

3min
pages 212-215

Magua | Simone Cortezão

2min
pages 200-203

Lo que da vida, mata | Elisa Montesinos

1min
pages 198-199

Lecturas del desierto | Michael Hirschbichler y Guillaume Othenin-Girard

1min
pages 210-211

Una flor en el cráter | Dagmara Wyskiel

2min
pages 206-209

Litio para el trastorno bipolar | Fabrice Michel

5min
pages 196-197

Lo que los turistas no ven | Elisa Montesinos

1min
pages 194-195

La muerte de la memoria | Equipo SACO

1min
pages 192-193

información y masividad actual | Elisa Montesinos

7min
pages 182-188

Una nota desde Antofagasta, Chile | Jaewook Lee

2min
pages 189-191

Revelando sonidos y silencios | Iván Ávila

3min
pages 168-171

Mediar la ausencia | Gabriel Navia y Carlos Rendón

3min
pages 172-175

Claudio Alarcón y Sebastián Rojas

2min
pages 162-165

Escuela sin escuela en el puerto | Carlos Rendón El nuevo rol del arte en el laberinto de

4min
pages 176-181

Sombras en Quillagua | Carlos Rendón

1min
pages 166-167

El lenguaje de los pájaros | Carlos Rendón Las imágenes que consumimos y proyectamos | Natalia Leal,

2min
pages 160-161

Microcuradurías módulo 2: Invaluable presencialidad | Carlos Rendón

5min
pages 154-159

Las luces del arte encendidas | Elisa Montesinos

4min
pages 150-153

Microcuradurías módulo 1: Curar desde lo precario | Carlos Rendón

7min
pages 146-149

con sus respetables labores | Elisa Montesinos

4min
pages 142-145

Curar desde lo micro | Dagmara Wyskiel

4min
pages 140-141

Microrreflexiones magistrales | Carlos Rendón

3min
pages 138-139

Ejemplos conceptuales para encontrar arte en desechos y contratos | Carlos Rendón

2min
pages 134-137

Tacto | Carlos Rendón

1min
pages 131-133

Exijo una explicación! | Rodolfo Andaur

2min
pages 120-130

Escuchar en lickanantay | Dagmara Wyskiel

1min
pages 116-119

Ventanas | Sebastián Rojas

1min
pages 96-99

Desterrada | Francisca Caporali

2min
pages 106-111

Las fragilidades del cuerpo | Dagmara Wyskiel

2min
page 100

Repensar para construir | Ana Agorio

1min
pages 101-105

ISLA+: cuestionar la (ir)realidad de la pandemia | Dagmara Wyskiel e Iván Ávila

2min
pages 112-115

Casa Azul: El living, el patio, la escalera, el dormitorio | Dagmara Wyskiel

1min
pages 92-95

Entrevistando a un hombre con cabeza de pájaro | Iván Ávila

3min
pages 86-91

A puerto | Elisa Montesinos

12min
pages 58-85

Nadie sabe qué es el arte | Enrique Rivera

3min
pages 26-29

Vueltas de página | Fernando Sicco

4min
pages 22-25

o cómo hacer arte de emergencia) | Camila Lucero

11min
pages 36-45

La exhortación de la inminencia | Lia Colombino

1min
pages 30-35

Un ahora intenso y prolongado | Yana Tamayo

5min
pages 15-21

Ahora es cuando. Texto curatorial SACO9 | Dagmara Wyskiel

2min
page 13

La paradoja del despertar | Equipo SACO

2min
page 14

Resistir sin caparazón | Dagmara Wyskiel

4min
pages 53-57
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.