September 24 - December 18, 2022
From Houston Climate Justice Museum:
“Usually imagined as an empty, lifeless, space, the desert is quite the opposite: it is a space inhabited and crossed by multiple agents, from a great variety of birds that search its skies to a wide range of mammals, insects, and bacteria. But in the case of the “border desert,” legal apparatuses disrupt it – transforming parts into a fence and hostile territory. The border desert becomes littered with traces of migrants as they are forced into crossing the most treacherous areas that stretch across the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico.
For And what was the desert like? It was like a large brownish mess and a rusty machine and a dot in a line, visual artist and writer Saúl Hernández-Vargas gathers a series of videos, sculptures, and performative gestures that invoke the ghosts and the specters of the borderlands, and that listen carefully, attentively, even furiously to the echoes, the breath, and the resonances of their voices. This series troubles and jolts the narratives that naturalize border territories (desert, rivers, oceans) as infrastructures of the Nation-State. It also highlights the convergence of climate change-fueled drought and NAFTA policies that have made displacement and migration issues of even graver concern.
The opening of the exhibit will include a panel discussion featuring the artist in conversation with Eddie Canales of the South Texas Human Rights Center as well as anthropologist Marina Azahua, whose research attempts to understand what it means to find a murdered body in Mexico today.
This body of work was supported by the Matakyev Research Residency from the Center for Imagination in the Borderlands from Arizona State University, and the Interdisciplinary Practices & Emerging Forms from the School of Art at the University of Houston.
About the artist:
Saúl Hernández-Vargas works at the crossroads between art, literature and academic research, and explores cracks and fissures in the narratives of the Nation-State. He has served as an editor for numerous publications in México and founded Yagular Magazine and sur+ Ediciones. He recently completed his PhD in Hispanic Studies and Art History at the University of Houston and also holds a masters degree in Visual Arts from the University of California, San Diego. He is currently an artist-in-residence in the Core Fellowship Program at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
About the panelists:
Marina Azahua is an essayist, editor, and PhD candidate in the Anthropology Department at Columbia University. Building on anthropological scholarship on bureaucracy and forensic evidence, her doctoral dissertation project examines the encounters of communities searching for the disappeared and state authorities. She is also the author of Involuntary Portrait: The photographic act as a form of violence.
Eddie Canales is the founder of the South Texas Human Rights Center: a community-based organization in Falfurrias, Texas dedicated to the promotion, protection, defense and exercise of human rights and dignity in South Texas. Their mission is to prevent the deaths and suffering of migrants on the Texas/Mexico border through community initiatives like their Water Station Project whose 144 stations service an area of 1200 sq. miles.”
Reception: September 24, 2022 | 6–8:30 pm
Houston Climate Justice Museum & Cultural Center
3308 Garrow St. Houston, TX 77003
Houston, 77003 Texas
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