Retiro

2019 - Film & Video (Film & Video)

39 minutes

Natalia Lassalle-Morillo


In her film Retiro (2019), Natalia Lassalle-Morillo considers how women pass down memories to their kin as they age. A film within a film, the three-channel portrait combines the scripted film she and her mother made together, behind-the-scenes shots of that film’s production, and interviews with her mother on gendered familial expectations and aging in Puerto Rico. Lassalle-Morillo’s meta approach to story-telling unpacks her relationship to her mother, demonstrating how maternal trauma, history, and myth are made and inherited through disjointed narratives. As a result, the film “reorganizes” ancestral trauma, giving the artist freedom to reject or move on from her inheritance, if she chooses to. The artist’s mother, Gloria—an actor, director, and screenwriter on the project—worries that history will repeat itself, as her stories, skills, and physical likeness endure through her daughter. She recounts finding refuge in her parents’ home after divorcing a man her parents never approved of, which coincided with the United States’s mid-20th-century industrialization of Puerto Rico, which changed the landscape and trajectories of many Puerto Ricans. Gloria also attempts to revive a garden that she has lost: not because it has disappeared, but in that it has become unrecognizable while within her grasp. When children are no longer recognizable from the tiny people they once were, are they gone forever? Retiro suggests that perhaps repetition can free children from their lineage, creating new beginnings, new myths, and new histories.


Natalia Lassalle-Morillo’s films explore familial, neighborly, and citizen relationships in the context of Puerto Rico’s fraught history with the United States and the resulting imperialist oppression that has altered generations of families’ material and spiritual trajectories. Born in Puerto Rico, the artist began realigning her relationship to the island after returning from the USA, delving into the multiplicity of conflicting histories she inherited as a multi-generational Puerto Rican. This sense of home-lessness—not a lack of housing but the feeling of having one’s home made unrecognizable as a product of colonization—manifests in Lassalle-Morillo’s works through multiplicity: many screens, many stories, and many iterations of a single idea that eventually unfold in its natural conclusion. The artist understands filmmaking not as truth telling, but as exploring the medium’s relationship to theater, where every person plays a part in making a story. By bringing the practice of theater into the camera, Lassalle-Morillo presents a filmmaking methodology that creates its own decolonial rhythms, disrupting Western linear notions of time.


Colors:



Other related works, blended automatically  
» see more

La Ruta
© » KADIST

Natalia Lassalle-Morillo

2018

La Ruta by Natalia Lassalle-Morillo follows the Panoramic Route, a now weakened infrastructure that meanders through untouched natural landscapes and off-road destinations on the island of Puerto Rico...

Related works sharing similar palette  
» see more

Powers Art Center to Open Andy Warhol Show with Works from The John and Kimiko Powers Collection - via The Aspen Times
© » LARRY'S LIST

The Powers Art Center in Carbondale will open an exhibit of Andy Warhol portraits and portfolios from the artist’s “Marilyn” and “Flowers” series....

Marcelo Cidade
© » KADIST

Marcelo Cidade was born in 1979, São Paulo, Brazil, where he lives and works...

WINDOW by ATTEMPTS: A click away
© » ARTS EQUATOR

WINDOW by ATTEMPTS: A click away | ArtsEquator Skip to content Who is SARA? Cheryl: There’s a SARA that me and Rei talked about, when we were just bouncing ideas...

WINDOW by ATTEMPTS: A click away
© » ARTS EQUATOR

WINDOW by ATTEMPTS: A click away | ArtsEquator Skip to content How would you describe WINDOW? Rei: Recently I described it as a theatrical video game...

Other works by: » Natalia Lassalle-Morillo  
» see more

La Ruta
© » KADIST

Natalia Lassalle-Morillo

2018

La Ruta by Natalia Lassalle-Morillo follows the Panoramic Route, a now weakened infrastructure that meanders through untouched natural landscapes and off-road destinations on the island of Puerto Rico...

Related works found in the same semantic group  
» see more

Cuando el maguey cae en un río
© » KADIST

Jorge González and Mónica Rodríguez, Cuando el maguey cae en un río: Madre-Agua es muy fuerte (When the maguey falls in a river: Mother-Water is too strong) Inspired by the artistic traditions of the Jíbaro Taíno people of the island of Boriquén (Puerto Rico) artists Jorge González and Mónica Rodríguez lead an afternoon of weaving, readings, and thinking about plant-based knowledge and workers’ rights...

Danielle De Jesus’s Ode to Puerto Rican Bushwick
© » HYPERALLERGIC

Danielle De Jesus’s Ode to Puerto Rican Bushwick Skip to content Danielle De Jesus, "Puerto Rican Rosary" (2023), oil and packing material on canvas, 48 x 60 inches (all images courtesy Danielle De Jesus) Artist Danielle De Jesus grew up near the intersection of Jefferson Street and Knickerbocker Avenue in a Puerto Rican household in Bushwick, a Brooklyn neighborhood that has steadily gentrified since the mid-aughts, when artists began establishing studios in the warehouses near Flushing Avenue...

La cabeza mató a todos
© » KADIST

Beatriz Santiago Muñoz

2014

La cabeza mató a todos or “The Head that Killed Everyone”, is a mixing of indigenous mythologies with present-day characters, geographies, and culture in Puerto Rico...

How Jean Brown Amassed One of the Biggest Collections of Fluxus Art - via Artsy
© » LARRY'S LIST

Through her support of the movement’s founder, George Maciunas, collector Jean Brown came to be known as the “den mother of Fluxus.”...