Pyre

2016 - Sculpture (Sculpture)

Dimensions variable

Joaquín Segura


Pyre , an installation by Mexico City-based artist Joaquín Segura, addresses corruption, impunity, and the role that failed governments play in the normalization of violence. The work references mass disappearances at the hands of corrupt armed forces and paramilitary groups that have taken place in Mexico since the 1960s and significantly escalated over the last decade due to the War on Drugs. While the piece may be installed any number of ways, it is marked by the precision of its material content: 71 liters of gasoline, 23 used car tires, and 760 kilograms of wood. These figures—the amount of matter necessary to incinerate a single human body—are based on the findings of independent forensic teams deployed in response to the implausibility of official government explanations of various vanishings. The state has directly perpetrated acts of violence and shrouded the truth on numerous occasions, including the student massacre of Tlatelolco in 1968, the Dirty War, the Acteal massacre, and, most notoriously, the 43 missing students of Ayotzinapa. These incidents demonstrate not only the escalating corruption of the state, but also its inability to handle crises of this magnitude. As mass graves are consistently uncovered, at times revealing hundreds of skulls in a single location, justice remains elusive. The families of the missing are forced to pay for DNA testing expenses to identify the bodies of their loved ones, hoping for some sort of closure. Although statistics vary greatly, it is estimated that tens of thousands are currently missing and feared dead. This work’s raw presence, coupled with the difficulty of imagining its contents multiplied by each vanished citizen, creates a chilling rejoinder to the public record and an active accounting for state violence and erasure, effectively occupying space that the missing cannot.


Joaquín Segura reflects on the phenomenology of violence, sociopolitical microclimates, and the relationship between ideology and history through actions, installations, interventions, and photographic works. Aimed at interrogating the nature of power and political apparatuses, especially across the history of Mexico, Segura often references specific historical events to explore a complex web of corruption, denial, and deception.


Colors:



Related works sharing similar palette  
» see more

Podcast 106: Boom
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Podcast 106: Boom | ArtsEquator Skip to content In our latest podcast, we discuss Boom, a production by A Mirage which took place on 1-20 July 2022...

Disability Arts – Notice us for our art, not our disability
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Disability Arts – Notice us for our art, not our disability | ArtsEquator Skip to content Isaac Lim outlines conversations in online disability arts panel discussion, Nothing About Us Without Us: Artists on crafting their voices ...

Book of Veles 18 - Konstantin
© » KADIST

Jonas Bendiksen

2021

For his project Book of Veles artist Jonas Bendiksen travelled to the small city of Veles in North Macedonia, inspired by a series of press reports starting in 2016, that revealed Veles as a major source of the fake news stories flooding Facebook and other social media sites celebrating Donald Trump and denigrating Hillary Clinton...

Related works found in the same semantic group  
» see more

Kids
© » KADIST

Song Ta

2011

In Kids , Song Ta has made reports to the information desk at the Guangzhou Zoo in order for missing children announcements to be broadcast throughout the zoo...

Cristal series
© » KADIST

Jorge de León

2015

Jorge de León most well-known work was a radical gesture, and one of his earliest artworks: in his 2000 performance, The Circle, de León sewed his own mouth closed as a protest against the silencing of citizens in the face of social corruption...

The Mermaids, or Aiden in Wonderland
© » KADIST

Karrabing Film Collective

2018

The Mermaids, or Aiden in Wonderland by Karrabing Film Collective is a surreal exploration of Western toxic contamination, capitalism, and human and non-human life...

Mesoamericana (new grand civilizations), Economic activities
© » KADIST

Edgardo Aragón

2016

Mesoamericana (Economic activities) is part of a larger project titled Mesoamerica: The Hurricane Effect, which includes a video as well as series of hand drawn maps -based on historical cartography- that examine the effects of foreign power in Mexico today...