An exhibition of works by Cuban art duo that includes installations, sculptures, watercolour drawings and a film screening. They aim to interrogate the functionality of architecture, design and the everyday object.
curated by Ziba Ardalan, Founder/Director of Parasol unit
Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art is delighted to present an exhibition of works by Cuban art collective, Los Carpinteros (Marco Castillo and Dagoberto Rodríguez). This exhibition, the duo’s first major show in a public London institution, includes extensive installations, sculptures, watercolour drawings and a film screening, which aim to explore and interrogate the functionality of architecture, design and the everyday object.
The deftly crafted -and often humorous- installations and sculptures made by Los Carpinteros may appear whimsical at first, yet every piece has an element of political commentary, mostly related to their personal experience and context. This dichotomy provides a vast resource with which they can be both playful and critical. Often described as ‘interrogative art’, their work examines the relationship between art and society, form and function, practicality and frivolousness.
For the Los Carpinteros exhibition at Parasol unit, the ground floor galleries are dedicated to large-scale installations and sculptures, such as Tomates, 2013. This extensive wall installation consists of more than 200 real tomatoes splattered against the gallery wall on which beautifully crafted porcelain tomatoes are installed, evoking with a poignant sensitivity the interplay of a political uprising. Also exhibited is 17m, an installation comprised of a 17-metre-long clothing rail on which hang more than two hundred black suits punctured throughout by a gaping star. Altoparlante Solimar (Solimar Loudspeaker), 2008, is an enormous ebony wood structure emulating Havana’s Solimar apartment building, designed by Manuel Copado in 1944 and well-known for its modernist design, imposing height and its large-scale sinusoidal balconies. The Los Carpinteros structure is a large acoustic box, in which each apartment has become a loudspeaker to reproduce the voices of the families living inside it. The towering LEGO® bricks construction, Robotica, 2013, is based on the State Scientific Center for Robotics and Technical Cybernetics in St. Petersburg, referencing former Soviet commemorative monuments.
Los Carpinteros’ watercolour drawings, several examples of which are included in the exhibition, often function like architectural blueprints for constructions that are built to scale and adapted for each particular exhibition space. These watercolour drawings offer a wealth of possibilities and inspiration for potential fabrication of works, although some only remain as fantasy, yet they are an intrinsic part of their practice, acting as a communicative tool or ongoing discussion between the artists.
In the upper-floor galleries is a series of watercolour drawings along with some small-scale prototype models which are based on prison structures and fabricated using Corten steel. Some of the models have materialised into large-scale reading rooms for other commissioned projects. Screening throughout the exhibition will be the film Conga Irreversible, 2012, a performance originally conceived and produced by Los Carpinteros art collective on the occasion of the 2012 Havana Biennial.
This exhibition is accompanied by a related programme of educational events at the foundation.
Los Carpinteros live and work between Madrid, Spain and Havana, Cuba.
Parasol unit is grateful for the kind and generous support of Arts Council England Grants for the Arts, Benjamín Nieto Segura, MARCO | Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey and Ivorypress.
Image: Cuarteto Rebelde, 2012. Wood and chrome metal, dimensions variable. Private collection. Courtesy of Ivorypress, Madrid © Los Carpinteros
Press contact:
Kirsteen Cairns T: +44 (0)20 7490 7373, ext. 26 E: kirsteen@parasol-unit.org
Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art
14 Wharf Road London, N1 7RW
Hours: Tuesday–Saturday 10am–6pm,
Sunday noon–5pm
Free admission