Arrhythmias of Counter-Production: Engaged Art in Argentina, 1995-2011

http://uag.ucsd.edu/exhibitions/ArrhythmiasofCounterProdcutionEngagedArtinArgentina19952011.shtml

06 October > 20 January 2012
Ala Plástica, Eduardo Molinari and El Archivo Caminante, Etcétera... and 
the Errorist International, Grupo de Arte Callejero (GAC), 
Iconoclasistas, Julian d'Angiolillo, La Tribu, Taller Popular de 
Serigrafía (TPS)

Opening Reception with Curator Jennifer Flores Sternad

06 October >  5:30-8:30pm

PRESS RELEASE


LA JOLLA -The University Art Gallery (UAG) at the University of 
California, San Diego is proud to present an exhibition of Argentine 
political art produced in the public sphere over the past fifteen years. 
Arrhythmias of Counter-Production: Engaged Art in Argentina, 1995-2011 
is running from October 6 to January 20 with an opening reception with 
the curator on October 6 at 5:30pm. The exhibit was curated especially 
for the UAG by Jennifer Flores Sternad, a doctoral candidate in the 
Department of Social and Cultural Analysis at NYU and a leading critic 
and scholar of political art in the Americas.

Arrhythmias will showcase art practices developed in Argentina since the 
mid-1990s that demonstrate exceptionally creative, and widely diverse, 
modes of engagement with present-day social and political struggles. The 
artists featured in the exhibition combine artistic practices and the 
pursuit of creative experimentation with methodologies and 
epistemologies, such as those associated with militant research, radical 
pedagogy, direct action, community organizing, critical cartography, 
tactical media and Brechtian theater. Many of the projects in the 
exhibition were developed through direct contact with, or in explicit 
alignment with, left social movements. In some cases, the artistic 
practice was coextensive with popular forms of struggle or grass-roots 
organizing. Other projects include anti-imperialist historiographical 
interventions that interweave the Southern Cone's colonial history with 
its present-day neoliberal order, studies of vast informal economies and 
the migrant and local labor that sustains them, and provocative street 
performances and media interventions that reveal the logic behind the 
discursive and legal system of anti-terrorism.

This work evolved in response to the various political and subjective 
tensions that accompanied the Argentine economic crisis, which peaked in 
2001 and 2002. These include a profound negation of state institutions, 
the protagonism of autonomous social movements, and popular militancy 
and grass-roots organizing attached to aesthetic invention. Another 
important point of reference for these artists is their understanding of 
the period popularly dubbed "post-crises," characterized by 
re-legitimation of the traditional political system, the repression and 
domestication of social movements and a turn towards a discourse of 
security. Described by its architects as a return to "normal 
capitalism," this transformation has been hailed internationally -- as 
well as by some sectors in Argentina -- as a remarkable "recovery" and 
successful return to stability.

If, as Ruth Gilmore writes, "Crisis signals systemic social change whose 
outcome is determined through struggle," the works in this exhibition 
trace the contours of this struggle over the past decade, up to the 
present. In doing so, they reject official representations of stability 
and development, defy the image of a kinder and gentler "normal" 
capitalism and interrogate the political theater through which these 
ideas are promoted. Dismantling the narrative of crisis and "recovery," 
they instead reveal the conditions of stability for the crisis state, 
and what it costs in labor, terror and even life --
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