PR x galleria
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PR x galleria
e x t r a s p a z i o via San Francesco di Sales 16/a I - 00165 Roma tel / fax +39 06 68210655 [email protected] www.extraspazio.it guillermo mora quizás mañana haya desaparecido curated by teresa macrì 4th october – 19th november 2011 On 4th October e x t r a s p a z i o gallery presents Quizás mañana haya desaparecido (Maybe tomorrow will be gone), Guillermo Mora’s first solo exhibition in Italy. NO FIXED FORM Minimal. Silent. Anxious. Precarious. Fluid. Outcast. Fragile. Disturbed. Attractive. Plasmatic. Tempting. Post-pop. Guillermo Mora’s sculptures seem to seize the liquid condition of the subject in the critical and global pivot of topicality. In their materic multiplicity and in their formless and unstable consistency they transit as discrete presences in an objectual universe where – still inopportunely, tediously and inadequately – a spectacular and perfectly manipulated aesthetic drags on, vacuous legacy of a post-eighties objectual opulence and symbolic emblem of technocratic post-capitalistic fetishism. But these little no fixed form sculptures which are manipulated by means of a postexistentialist pictorial process that crosses the state of solidification, or which reify themselves as such after having been robbed of their anonymous randomness as objects found in the street (hence homeless materials), or which assemble together through empathy, or which appear to have been masticated like syrupy chewing gum, catapult us into the stage of uncertainty. At the same time they plunge us back into that aesthetic of precariousness which countertrend artists like Jason Rhoades, David Hammons, Gabriel Orozco, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Bojan Šarčević, Dieter Roth (and many others and in many ways) have employed as a criticism of the late-capitalist system, galvanised and structured as a universe of objectual vacuity, hyper-sensationalistic, which now appears in all its vexation and pathetic nature. Mora’s sculptures actually have the most intimate and almost playful will to recline on their own Self and inquire into their own sense of inadequacy, of unease and suspicion which, reluctantly, coagulates with the state of global indeterminateness. What appears in them is a glimmer of criticism of the real and the embarrassment of perfectionism (illusory and fairytale-like), the objectual and systemic perfectionism of a universe which is cloned, mendacious, improvident and far from realistic, in which we have sailed on the surface and are now drowning. Quizás mañana haya desaparecido is almost an aphorism by the artist, his mocking awareness of the liquidity of the real, of the Ego, of matter, of the object, of thought. Quizás mañana haya desaparecido does not pose the apocalyptic question of the world’s existence but rather triggers doubt about the habitus in which a dialogical Self (and its whole spectral universe) might be relocated. Teresa Macrì Rome, September 2011 Guillermo Mora was born in Alcalà de Henares (Spain) in 1980; lives and works between Rome and Madrid. Among his solo exhibitions we mention: Dos episodios y un estadio (cur. P. Lag), LAB, Injuve, Murcia, Spain (2011); Una pregunta diaria, Formato Cómodo Gallery, Madrid (2010); De un soplo, Casa de la Entrevista, Alcalá de Henares; Tú la llevas (cur. I. Tejeda), Casa de Cultura, El Campello, Alicante; Un paseo entre el dibujo, la pintura y un más allá (cur. V. Torrente), Centro de Arte Joven de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid (2009). Among his group exhibitions: Nomadismi (cur. T. Macrì), Real Academia de España en Roma, Rome (2011); XII International Award for Young Artists, Luís Adelantado Gallery, Valencia; Explum 2010, International Contemporary Art Award, Puerto Lumbreras, Spain (2010); XX CIRCUITOS de Artes Plásticas y Fotografía, Sala de Arte Joven, Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid (2009); XI Biennial of Visual Arts, Pamplona, Spain; X International Show Union Fenosa, MACUF, La Coruña, Spain; IX UNICAJA Biennial of Visual Arts, Palacio Episcopal, Málaga (2008); Generación 2007, Caja Madrid Grants and Awards, La Casa Encendida, Madrid | La Capella, Barcelona | Museo de la Pasión and Iglesia de las Francesas, Valladolid | Atarazanas, Valencia | Santa Inés, Sevilla; Y si no han muerto, todavía están vivos, Museo Municipal de Coimbra, Portugal; Big Sky, LG Space, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2007). Open Tuesday to Saturday 3.30 - 7.30 pm and by appointment.