Letters of a Compass
Letters of a Compass
Artists: LAZO (Rodrigo Moreira, Claudia Cortínez, Mauricio Cortes Ortega, Alva Mooses)
Gallery: Abrazo Interno Gallery
Dates: Feb 3rd- Feb 24th
Opening Reception: Thursday , February 3rd 5-8pm
Letters of Compass, an installation and performance series created by the art collective LAZO, opens at The Clemente on January 29th, 2022. The installation includes a central platform structure inspired by the four cardinal points that acts as a bridge, a podium, a crossroads, and a stage. Along the walls are reproduced photographs of sky gathered from throughout the Americas, printed with analog and digital methods. A series of the images are printed on envelopes making reference to the materiality of an epistolary practice, now almost defunct through the immediacy of digital correspondence. Both collaborative and participatory, Letters of Compass addresses relations that have been deeply severed during the pandemic, such as communication, travel, and physical interaction.
The central structure is elevated above the floor and inscribed upon it are slots that open to a sandbed below. Visitors are invited to deposit notes, drawings, photographs, and small ephemera here—these items will form part of a culminating publication that documents the materials gathered during the exhibition. The bed of sand acts similarly, accumulating marks and traces of interaction over time. Like a compass rose (rosa de los vientos / rosa dos ventos), the platform’s shape suggests cardinal points and the possibility of orienting oneself within the various prints and photographs on the gallery walls.
The surrounding images point to nowhere and everywhere. The earth’s expansive sky is often depicted as a site for endless contemplation and experiences of the sublime, yet it is also a universal ground for navigation, political contestation, human pollution, and a vast range of complex conditions that define the human experience. The processes LAZO has used––screenprint, cyanotype, and digital prints––suggest the extent to which humanity's relationships with the sky have become idealized and fragmented. The delicacy of these works on paper may speak to the fragility of our current relationships to the physical world.
LAZO’s installation is an invitation to meditate on cielo y tierra / céu e terra: How do we center in times of severed relationships and limited encounters? How do we open space for contemplation and collaboration when our focus is subsisting day-to-day? Today's notions of creativity and spontaneity seem to be overruled by monetization and separations: separations between bodies, screens, and geographical distance. Additionally, our invaluable moments of contemplation are often mediated through algorithms outside of us. How do we reorient ourselves with other beings, spaces, and time?
“La única forma de sobrevivir es mirando el cielo” (the only way to survive is looking at the sky) writes invited poet Mia Maurer as the final line of her poem La única forma de sobrevivir las matemáticas, printed as a cyanotype scroll for the occasion of the exhibition. In the piece, Maurer reflects on the definitions of a series of words, expanding their usual meanings through associations as if the terms were sifting clouds, observing natural states of impermanence. Meanings fade in and out, revealing the constant shifting of language and thoughts..
Letters of Compass invites participants to create new ways of engaging collectively, and rethink both contemporary and historic forms of communication and image-making. Visitors can experience an array of textures generated through printing methods that abstract and only come into full resolution in the postcard-sized photographs. The installation and performances address imposed practices of separation that are prevalent in our current times by creating a space for artists to propose new centers and directions. The poetics of image and word, the earth and the compass, are offerings LAZO's artists and their collaborators give us to navigate this moment of tempests.
text by Tatiane Santa Rosa
LAZO (in Spanish meaning ‘tie’ or ‘link’) is an art collective that brings together artists and related practitioners of Latin American & Caribbean descent to create participatory projects and exhibitions. LAZO’s members are Rodrigo Moreira, Claudia Cortínez, Mauricio Cortes Ortega, and Alva Mooses.
Performers and collaborators:
Mana Bugallo is an Argentine NYC-based poet, performer, singer and activist. Her performances combine elements of spoken word and lyrical performative experimentation, blending poetry and music into narrative fragments that recall childhood memories, sexuality, and humorings on everyday life.
Clints Pavelus is a singer with an original voice of traditional Haitian voodoo rhythms. Clints promotes the traditional music of his country with Afro-Caribbean rhythms" Nago, Petro, Ibo, Yanvalou, dances etc. He has participated in various music festivals internationally and has represented Haiti at the Carifesta festival in Barbados. His dynamic performances offer an unforgettable musical journey.
Ensamble Ferroeléctrico de Marte- is an experimental music collective originating from Argentina whose instruments are built entirely out of iron and performed anonymously from behind iron masks. Ensamble Ferroeléctrico de Marte engages an animistic philosophy of Nature where each musical note reveals a definitive animal origin. The musical score combines with statuesque forms, in this case the character of a bird, that sings in an invented language to indicate ancient totemistic and planetary origins. The instruments are a result of careful exploration of sound and the incorporation of new and primitive technologies.
Rafael Sanchez is a performance artist who believes in the power and beauty of endurance, decay, and resilience. He stages public performances that require audience participation, deep contemplation and a psycho-educational commitment to growth. All actions for his performance triptych, as part of Letters of a Compass, rely heavily upon ancestral power, soul knowledge, and the work of bell hooks, Zhang Zhan, and Julia de Burgos. Enjoy, participate, and maybe win a shirt or something organic that fits in the palm of your hand.
Mia Maurer- Poet, writer, and educator based in Valparaiso, Chile. Mia has worked extensively teaching creative writing, poetry, and Oneiric Creative Writing workshops in the US and Latin America. As a collaboration with LAZO, Mia has contributed a poem from her upcoming book Cartilagos to accompany the exhibition, as well as an audio recording reciting the piece.
Mirene Arsanios- is the author of the short story collection, The City Outside the Sentence (Ashkal Alwan, 2015). She has contributed essays and short stories to e-flux journal, Vida, The Brooklyn Rail, LitHub, and Guernica, among others. Her writing was featured collaboratively at the Sharjah Biennial (2017) and Venice Biennial (2017), as well as in various artist books and projects. Arsanios co-founded the collective 98weeks Research Project in Beirut and is the founding editor of Makhzin, a bilingual English/Arabic magazine for innovative writing. A remote writing workshop will be conducted by Mirene Arsanios as part of Letters of a Compass
Gonzalo Maggi is an Argentine photographer and director of Intemperie, an artist exhibition platform based in Buenos Aires. His photographs, often expansive narrative fragments, depict figures engaging with the architecture of suburban outskirts and borders, transforming the banality of common spaces into disquieting thresholds. Gonzalo has contributed a selection of photographs to the Letters of a Compass installation.
Doug Berns is a maestro of bass and face. He holds it down for afro-beat heavyweights Antibalas and EMEFE, and his songwriting has been featured on television, screen and even virtual reality. You can catch him week in and week out keeping the party going with Big Woozy Band, and as a member of the Cafe Wha? house band.
Letters of a Compass was made possible through the support of an LMCC Creative Engagement Grant, The Clemente Center, and the Lower East Side Printshop.
Photo documentation by Claudia Cortínez