Cecilia Vicuña’s Poetry in Space
The artist suggests that like her fragile assemblages, peace demands care, balance, and the resolve to hold together what might otherwise fall apart. by Clara Maria ApostolatosSubscribe to our newsletter
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The exhibition also features the first United States presentation of Cecilia Vicuña’s monumental quipu, “NAUfraga” (2022), following its premiere at the 59th Venice Biennale. Once used as an Andean ancestral record-keeping device of knotted threads, the quipu is reimagined by Vicuña as an immersive “poem in space,” according to the press release, or a rhythmic cascade of shells, rocks, dried plants, and fragments of nets, jutes, and plastics gathered from the Venetian lagoon. For the first time, visitors can walk through “NAUfraga,” an experience akin to weaving through a shifting web of suspended sea wrack, where natural debris meets human-made refuse.
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With “A Prayer for the Rebirth of Peace in the All Lands” (2024), Vicuña continues her precarios (1966–) series, transforming natural and inorganic debris into small-scale, lyrical sculptures. Arranged across an expansive wall like relics of our throwaway culture, the sculptures are framed by a loosely scribbled chalk prayer about ecological precarity and political uncertainty: “We are at war with ourselves, with each other, and with the land.” The sculptures are delicately bound together in off-kilter forms that feel both precarious and playfully charismatic — among them, a metal coil tethered to a stone by a brittle twig, netting enveloping plastic and shell shards, and a withered sprig extending like an olive branch.
The work continues with a large piece of bark that rests on the floor, topped with smaller wooden fragments; visitors are invited to write single-word messages of peace, friendship, and respect in chalk across its surfaces. The clumsily layered languages — a prayer spoken across divides — analogize the tenuous yet vital struggle for peace in a contemporary moment riddled with global conflict. It suggests that, like these fragile assemblages, peace demands care, balance, and the resolve to hold together what might otherwise fall apart.
Beyond tending to that which disappears, Vicuña’s work is a reminder that what is lost or discarded — whether materials, histories, or traditions on the brink of vanishing — can be reimagined, underscoring that resilience often begins with recognizing value where others see waste.
Cecilia Vicuña: La Migranta Blue Nipple continues at Lehmann Maupin (501 West 24th Street, Chelsea, Manhattan) through January 11, 2025. The exhibition was organized by the gallery.
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