Artist's simulated banana grove is a stinking indictment of American corporate greed
Artist's simulated banana grove is a stinking indictment of American corporate greed
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José Alejandro Restrepo's "Musa Paradisiaca" video installation at LAXART consists of bananas in various states of decay, hauntingly hung with screens running grainy video of slain plantation workers in his native Colombia. (John Kiffe)
Sharon Mizota
OCTOBER 15, 2017, 10:55 AM
Walk into Video Art in Latin America at LAXART and youll wonder: Why does it smell like rotten bananas in here?
The gallerys contribution to the constellation of exhibitions known as Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA is a sprawling survey of video from the 1970s to the present. Deftly curated by the Getty Research Institutes Glenn Phillips and scholar Elena Shtromberg, it is designed to be experienced on multiple levels, one of which is unexpectedly olfactory.
That sickly sweet aroma, edged with the tang of decay, comes from Musa paradisiaca, a large installation by Colombian artist José Alejandro Restrepo. (The title is the Latin name for a type of edible banana.) Quietly dominating the central gallery is a hanging garden of banana tree stems, each one studded with many, many bunches of bananas. The fruits are in various stages of decay, but most are little more than shriveled black nubs. In the large, darkened gallery, the stems are a haunting presence, like chunks of meat hung up to cure, or more disturbing, hanging bodies.
This last association turns out to be apt. Dangling from the bottom of several stems are tiny cathode ray tubes, one per stem. The screens are turned downward, and the only way to see whats playing is by looking into a small, round mirror positioned on the floor. It takes a moment to find the right viewing angle, which often involves placing ones face in awkward proximity to rotting fruit. The reflected video image feels fugitive: small, partial, grainy in black and white. A small shift in position, and it disappears from view. Still, it doesnt take long to recognize that its documentary footage of dead bodies.
More:
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/arts/la-et-cm-jose-alejandro-restropo-review-20171015-story.html