Jennifer Teets and Lorenzo Cirrincione at Parallel Oaxaca

009Elusive Earths III at Parallel Oaxaca

Artists: Jennifer Teets and Lorenzo Cirrincione

Exhibition title: Elusive Earths III

Venue: Parallel Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico

Date: April 29 – June 7, 2016

Photography: Enrique Macías, all images copyright and courtesy of the artists and Parallel Oaxaca

Elusive Earths III is an ongoing in situ work, process, and dialogue between Jennifer Teets and Lorenzo Cirrincione, that looks to the elusiveness of rare clays, soils, and earths with forgotten origins. Over time this research has involved different forms of replication, extraction, and multiplication of processes and their distribution as “clay narratives”.

The first step of the earth works began over the summer of 2014 in Greece. The departure point was terra sigillata (sealed earth), edible medicinal clay pastilles sourced from Greek antiquity that one could attribute to one of the first lineages of pharmacology, and clearly involved an implicit performativity in their preparation. While searching for these antiquated earths on islands in the Aegean sea, other earths were discovered, including industrial clays currently being considered for use in the rare earth and pharmaceautical industries. The second phase of the work presented in Colombia in 2014, featured objects and earth paraphernalia as well as three core samples of Terra preta, also known as “Amazonian dark earth” or “Indian black earth”, a manmade anthropogenic soil of a pre Colombian nature, created in the slash-andchar method, and controversial for its appropriation and commodification in biochar (carbon sequestring) circles.

For the third iteration in Oaxaca, an itinerary of local earth consumption is traced from seventeenth century Guatemala to one sole family from Tlacolula, who possess the remaining understanding of “pan de tierra bendita” production– an edible clay cake, bearing religious figures. It also brings attention to remaining modes of consumption of “chogosta,” a “mud candy” dug out, sculpted, barbequed, and eaten in Jáltipan, Veracruz. As a constantly transforming exhibition body, Elusive Earths takes inventory of such edible clays and their imaginaries, placing emphasis on the performativity of the extraction of natural resources and the moral economies in pharmacological panacea. A kind of world assemblage and information circuit which itself is embedded in various levels of cultural catalyzing forces: discoveries, trade, standardization processes, the shaping of local practices and the interlaced circulations of knowledge.

Lorenzo Cirrincione is a philosopher, curator, and artist. Doctor in history of science, he is currently writing on early modern scientific collections – how they challenge us and stretch beyond obsolete ideas of artistic privilege and appropriation. As an artist his work investigates new ways of exhibiting and performing knowledge, mirroring the social and cultural games in the rich history of trade relations and cultural transfers. From 2004 to 2015, Lorenzo Cirrincione co-directed France Fiction, an artistic and curatorial entity that has organized over eighty exhibitions in France and abroad.

Jennifer Teets is a curator and writer. Her research combines inquiry, sciences studies, philosophy, and ficto-critique, and performs as an interrogative springboard for her curatorial practice. She is known for her work with cheese, mud, and terra-sigillata – their transitioning towards materiality and entity and their ability to become something else when put in an exhibition or an essay. She co-hosts the series (w/Margarida Mendes) The World in Which We Occur, an event series taking place over the telephone, and formulated around the history of materiality and flux as well as pertinent politically enmeshed scientific affairs shaping our world today. The World in Which We Occur recently premiered at the XII Baltic Triennial in Vilnius and Riga and has forthcoming editions in Lisbon, Paris, and London in 2016. Teets holds a Master in Experimentation in Arts and Politics from Sciences Po, Paris, a program led by the sociologist and philosopher Bruno Latour.

With thanks to:
Sra. Juana Antonio Raymundo y Familia Antonio Luis (Tlacolula), Antonio Alonso Hernández (San Sebastián, Etla), Lorena Ancona, Alexandre Guirkinger, Ricardo Perry Guillén, Fernando Guadarrama, Sr. Pedro Martínez (Jaltipan), Sr. Mario Castellanos, Enrique Macías.

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Elusive Earths B.A. Jennifer

Elusive Earths B.A. Lorenzo