Memorial for intersection #2

2013 - Sculpture (Sculpture)

Amalia Pica

location: London, United Kingdom
year born: 1978
gender: female
nationality: Argentine
home town: Neuquén, Argentina

Memorial for intersections #2 (2013) is a minimalist, black metallic structure that contains the brightly colored translucent circles, triangles, rectangles, and squares that originally were presented in Pica’s performance work A ? B ? C (2013). When read as A intersection B intersection C, this piece references the fact that, during the last dictatorship in Argentina (1976–83), the military junta forbade Venn diagrams, and the related concept of intersection, from being taught in elementary schools, because they were viewed as potentially subversive. In A ? B ? C , Pica invited performers to manipulate translucent, colored Perspex shapes, producing new configurations that used the idea of intersection to reimagine collaboration and community. This work enacts the very role that its title suggests, asking how a performance can become a sculpture. The structure transforms the original human performative gestures into cold, stylized frames that indeed memorialize something that was once living. If most memorials are monuments—that is, embedded in rich substrata of symbolic references—then Memorials for intersections are delicate and literal tributes to the truisms of math. Borrowing from minimalist and constructivist traditions, the memorials are simple, almost sophomoric, in the directness of their shapes and colors. While fixed in place, the transparent geometric panels hanging on the frame shift in tone throughout the day, responding to changes in light and reverberating with the live actions that led to their conception.


Amalia Pica describes herself as an outsider, in the sense that she is an Argentine artist living and working in an art world that is still largely dominated by the same nations that colonized the globe centuries ago. But Pica is not the kind of outsider who stands by sullenly and criticizes; she’s more like the quirky character spouting wit and wisdom from the peripheries of the stage. Her works often engage with the idea of being out of place and out of time—staging the aftermath of a celebration rather than the party itself, for example—all the while maintaining an attitude of bemused observation.


Colors:



Related works from the » 2010's created around » London, United Kingdom

Untitled (Details from fictional realities)
© » KADIST

Matt Mullican

2018

Mullican’s Stick Figure Drawings depict characters reduced to their most basic graphic representation...

Faltenwurf (Stairwell)
© » KADIST

Wolfgang Tillmans

2017

Wolfgang Tillmans initiated the ongoing series Faltenwurf in 1989, representing compositions of unused clothing, with special attention paid to the ways in which they drape and fold...

Epiphany…learnt through hardship
© » KADIST

Ryan Gander

2012

Epiphany…learnt through hardship is composed of a bronze sculpture depicting the model of the little dancer of Degas, in the pose of a female nude photographed by Edward Weston (Nude, 1936) accompanied by a blue cube...

Japanese House Series
© » KADIST

Tomoko Yoneda

2010

Yoneda’s Japanese House (2010) series of photographs depicts buildings constructed in Taiwan during the period of Japanese occupation, between 1895 and 1945...

Untitled (Map)
© » KADIST

Charles Avery

2011

Charles Avery has been constructing a narrative in his work since 2004...

Not Today
© » KADIST

Karla Black

2013

Karla Black is a Scottish artist living in Glasgow ...

Espadrilles
© » KADIST

Rosalind Nashashibi

2019

Rosalind Nashashibi’s paintings incorporate motifs drawn from her day-to-day environment, often reworked with multiple variations...

Laissez-Faire (Rainbow Flag)
© » KADIST

Alexandre da Cunha

2010

In Laissez-Faire (Rainbow Flag) da Cunha has turned a beach towel into both a painting and a flag...

West (Flag 1) (Flag 3) (Flag 6)
© » KADIST

Alexandre da Cunha

2011

The series West (Flag 1), West (Flag 3), and West (Flag 6) continues da Cunha’s ongoing exploration of the form’s various vertical, horizontal, and diagonal stripes...

Untitled (Waiters dancing with Itinerants, Onomatopoeia)
© » KADIST

Charles Avery

2012

Since 2005, Charles Avery has devoted his practice to the perpetual description of a fictional island...

Itch
© » KADIST

Yang Guangnan

2011

Itch explores the relationship between technology and daily human experience with a motorized arm that extends from within the gallery’s wall, moving up and down while holding a projector that shows a desperately scratching pair of hands....

Destilaciones
© » KADIST

Ximena Garrido Lecca

2014

Destilaciones ( Distillations , 2014) is an installation composed of a group of ceramic pots, presented on the floor and within a steel structure...

Beyond the White Walls
© » KADIST

Jeremy Deller

2012

Beyond the White Walls , with a commentary written and spoken by Jeremy Deller, is often wryly amusing...