Vertical Earthquake
Annet Gelink Gallery proudly presents Vertical Earthquake, the second solo exhibition of Carlos Amorales (Mexico D.F. 1970). In this installation Amorales refers to the 1985 earthquake in Mexico City, which he witnessed at the age of fifteen. The
earthquake was very important for Amorales in regard to his aesthetic development. Manifesting itself in two ways,
emotionally deeply affected by the drama of the event he saw in the ruined buildings also the beauty of chaos and image
fragmentation.
The latter is typical for Amorales’ work in which the picture is often built from various fragments. The observer is
hereby invited by the artist to assign an own meaning to the work. 'I don't create art that lectures or tells you what to think,
instead my art helps you ponder, giving possibilities of what to think', says Amorales. The flow of criticism that after the
earthquake followed the actions of the Mexican authorities laid the foundation for the political nature of Amorales' work. In his
work he criticized the exploitation of cheap labor when he participated in the Dutch pavilion for the Venice Biennale in 2003
with a variation of a Mexican sweatshop (Flames Maquiladora, 2001-2002). For Origami Bomb (2003-2004) he used the
propaganda strategy of the Mexican government to reach people with flyers distributed from the air.
For Vertical Earthquake, the wall paintings in the gallery were made with the tools hanging on the walls - rulers in various
forms derived from the fault lines in the ruined buildings. In the middle of the room, on two white tables, newspapers contain
photos of the ruined buildings on which drawings of the fault lines have been made, the articles consist of anarchist texts from
both famous and unknown writers.
Discarded spider, (2008) a16mm film transferred to video shows large-scale spiderwebs of malleable aluminim being
transformed by the artist, adding texture to the otherwise flat image. His dark silhouette against the netting makes it look as
though the artist is trapped in the gossamer.
Beside the installation there are paintings and collages on display. The images appearing in the collages originate from his
'Liquid Archive', a database of pictures to which Amorales adds pictures produced by himself and from the media. Before
admitting the pictures to the 'Liquid Archive' Amorales abstracts areas of the image with blocks of colour. The re-appearing
images in the 'Liquid Archive' are taken by Amorales from their original context and united in new and unusual combinations.
Carlos Amorales studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam and at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in
Amsterdam. At the end of the nineties he became known for his 'wrestling performances'. Since then his work has been
frequently on display in museums and cultural institution in and outside the Netherlands. There were solo exhibitions by him
in Tate Modern in London, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam and the Philadelphia Museum of Art and recently
large exhibitions in Kunsthalle Fridericianum in Kassel and in the Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art in Tel Aviv. Currently
his solo exhibition Vivir por fuera de las casa de uno e can be viewed in the Museo Amparo in Puebla, Mexico.
Annet Gelink Gallery
Laurierstraat 187-189
NL-1016 PL Amsterdam The Netherlands
Hours:
tuesday to friday 10 am - 6 pm
saturdays 1 - 6 pm