A gold aura figure nests in the crownshaft of a Sabal Palm, as a syncretic pieta between an exotic, synthetic mother and her endemic habitat. The natural and man made materials composed along with the title- refer to the translation between gendered geographies and spiritual traditions of Caribbean and Andean cultures. Luna Miel is Honeymoon, referring to the drizzled, golden surface of the pregnant fertility effigy's fecund glow.
Recalling liberation mythology retablos found in tropical terrains, the work considers the culture of procreation in the Americas- a complicated historical, political, and geographic context wherein conquering the wild landscape, reproductive bodies, and indigenous societies stem from a colonial Eurocentric legacy. Inhabiting its endemic environment, the fertility votive is made by combining intimate ephemera and environmental waste cast into a slurry of domestic construction materials. Monuments to the fertile survivors of man-made and natural disasters, the Mother Mold effigy figures bear the burdens of internalized structural violence made in and of our bodies, our landscape and our movement. Luna Miel (Oro) combines different forms of corn with gold powders to both evoke imagery of the glowing, Byzantine Madonna enthroned along with the legacy of colonial trade harvesting indigenous resources such as maize and gold for imperial industries and commerce. The raw, processed and discarded materials are emboldened by a tropical, pregnant figure to embody our collective refuse as a site for procreative refuge.
Apariciones: Virgen Gruta (2020-present) photographs render fertility effigy altars of Mother Mold monuments in their fecund habitat to reclaim American material refuse as a vernacular, maternal refuge. Venerating entropic life and death cycle rituals across indigenous equatorial cultivars, the vibrant retablos are apparitions of vulnerable, yet unvanquished interior psychic landscapes overcoming assimilation and species collapse. Welcoming and warning viewers to the fabled biography of plantation labor farms and botanica pharmacies, the works excavate biological impacts on melanated, chosen families whose endangered plantology wisdom transgresses health and habitat disparities. Digging in personal and global South and equatorial archives over 2 decades, the artist renders the geopolitics of gender, displacement and land sovereignty emerging within the syncretic sites in their familiar, queer and quaint, endemic or exotic landscape.
- Subject Matter: Pregnant Figure
- Collections: Apariciones Virgen Gruta series, Linea Negra photographs