ESPEJO QUEMADA
Ballroom Marfa
June 26, 2021–January 2, 2022
Curated by Daisy Nam
Donna Huanca presents a series of new works commissioned by Ballroom Marfa in her exhibition ESPEJO QUEMADA. Huanca creates experiential installations that incorporate paintings, sculptures, video, scent and sound. The profound experiences and memories of Huanca’s first visit to Marfa in 2005 inspired the work in the exhibition. The artworks draw on visual, cultural, and mythological cues informed by feminism, decolonialism and the artist’s personal and familial histories, while simultaneously engaging with the geology, and dark skies of Far West Texas. The sky was particularly striking for Huanca–animated with cosmic and extraterrestrial forces while also revealing the natural rhythms of the sun and moon.
ESPEJO QUEMADA, Huanca’s first exhibition since the pandemic, uses mirrors as formal and metaphorical devices to respond to changing conditions. The title, which translates to “burnt mirror” in English and is purposefully feminized in Spanish, alludes to Huanca’s feminist praxis.
“Espejo Quemada” suggests reflections of the current moment, portals to the past and future, and catalysts for combustion and change.
The experiences of time, touch and embodiment must all be reconsidered in the shadow of the pandemic, especially as physical contact and proximity to bodies and objects have been restricted. Artworks too are now mostly encountered digitally. By working with an amalgam of color, texture, sound, and scent to enliven the senses, Huanca creates alternative and elongated temporal spaces for contemplation. Through perceptual transformations, we are reminded that the sentient body is a potent source of knowledge and memories.
Viewers experience powerful phenomenological shifts especially through her new work in Ballroom’s courtyard. The artist’s first outdoor sculpture, made of polished steel, is installed atop an adobe bench and set within a geoglyph made of white marble stones.
DONNA HUANCA
ESPEJO QUEMADA
Ballroom Marfa
June 26, 2021–January 2, 2022
Courtesy the artist and Ballroom Marfa.
Photo by Makenzie Goodman.