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Minerva Cuevas in "Mexico City" - Season 8 | Art21

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    [crowds chanting]
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    [strumming music]
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    [crowds chanting]
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    [distant sirens]
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    [Minerva Cuevas] I feel my work is very
    rooted to Mexico,
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    to my background,
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    the sense of community and social justice.
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    We are in a general crisis.
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    The disappearance of the 43 students 
    of the Ayotzinapa school is, I think,
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    one of the most well-known situations and 
    political crises in Mexico at the moment.
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    I started working with 
    "Disidencia" project in 2007.
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    I was going to film, and very 
    much trace a cartography of
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    resistance and dissidence in Mexico City.
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    Mexico City, for me, it's so rich.
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    [violin music]
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    I think the city's inspiring 
    because it's full of improvisation.
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    Mexico City, it's very mixed in terms of class, of race.
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    It's very much built by the indigenous,
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    the people that came from all 
    the other states in Mexico.
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    ♪ ♪
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    And I think the other element 
    that is present together
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    with this rural element is the sense of community.
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    ♪ ♪
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    I was born
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    in Mexico City, here, but 
    my family comes from Oaxaca.
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    So if I have to say that my roots are somewhere 
    in the country, it would be the south.
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    I studied visual arts, but I quit school.
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    It was around the early Nineties.
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    And the art scene became quite interesting
    because anything was possible.
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    It was not evident at the 
    beginning of my production
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    that it was going to take a political direction,
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    but suddenly, it just became obvious.
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    — From here, we can see the Latin-American Tower.
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    That's where I used to have the 
    office space on the 14th floor.
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    It used to be in every postcard of Mexico City.
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    Now that's changing, but, yeah,
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    it's still a very symbolic building.
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    [Minerva Cuevas] The Better Life Corporation started around '98.
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    It's probably my most important work.
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    [typewriter clicking]
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    At the beginning, it was not 
    planned as an art project.
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    Just these symbolic actions, 
    some giving away little gifts.
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    It could be a subway ticket.
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    It could be a barcode sticker for the supermarket,
    student I.D. card.
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    It created this sense of freedom 
    that actions are possible.
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    So I think you empower people...
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    This little disturbance in the system, no?
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    It's finding the gap in the bureaucratic process.
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    With the barcodes intervention, 
    I could alter just the lines,
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    and people were buying cheaper food--of course,
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    it's micro sabotage--
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    and then little by little, it 
    became an art project, as well.
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    It gets exhibited in cultural spaces,
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    and that's very important because it became 
    the second stage of this street intervention.
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    In any conceptual art, the main 
    thing is to generate the idea,
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    and in my case, it's the social idea.
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    [flute music]
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    — You should mark them with a pencil.
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    Like this one that's rounded, or this right now.
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    — Ok.
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    — No mas.
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    [Minerva Cuevas] In this visual society, it seems 
    that we are at the same time blinded.
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    All the things that we face every day 
    that are signs of the social crisis,
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    sometimes they get transparent and 
    forgotten, so some of my projects,
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    the exercise is very much reworking the 
    visual code to make things visible again.
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    One of the first ones was 
    the "Del Montte" campaign.
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    I decided to alter the brand and generate 
    a campaign about the actual situation of
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    how the company is influencing politics or 
    land struggles in countries like Guatemala.
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    — Careful with the paintbrush up on the ladder.
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    [chuckles]
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    In my case, as everything is 
    generated as conceptual art,
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    it's secondary if it's made by 
    me or if it's painted by me,
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    but usually, I let those things 
    to the professional sign painters.
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    For me, it's a strategy that connects to 
    billboards or other kind of advertising
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    the branding of companies.
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    You are already familiar with the image,
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    and then you get this other connotation 
    connected to that image,
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    so it's playful.
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    [traffic sounds]
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    — Si.
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    I got interested in primitive currency.
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    And cacao was used as currency 
    in pre-Hispanic times in Mexico.
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    — The most political cacao is
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    the Soconusco cacao, the one we used to produce 500 ears for the show.
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    — It was the first chocolate to cross the
    Atlantic in human history.
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    And the Catholic monarchs tried it for the first time
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    — 1521, no?
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    — Exactly.
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    [Minerva Cuevas] For me, the exhibition "Feast and Famine" was 
    very much a reference to the capitalist system,
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    considering the whole capitalist 
    system as a cannibalist process
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    — It looks like blood, no?
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    — Si.
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    because I think that puts together two 
    of the characteristics of capitalism--
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    the exploitation of all the 
    resources in the planet--
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    so it's all this feast; but at the end,
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    we are reaching the point of societies 
    that are dying of starvation.
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    For me, the most important 
    art work in the whole show,
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    it's the chocolate dripping 
    from the ceiling of the gallery.
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    [Dripping]
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    Every time the
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    chocolate drips, one person dies of starvation 
    in the world,
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    and that's every 3.6 seconds.
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    It's a terrible fact, but somehow it's 
    translated into this chocolate sculpture.
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    [Dripping continues]
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    [Dripping continues]
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    Since pre-Hispanic times,
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    the neighborhood of 
    Tepito was a place for a market,
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    and that's why they are somehow occupying 
    the streets to have their businesses.
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    I like when there are these spaces of 
    freedom on the streets in Mexico City.
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    The area itself has been very 
    united and almost autonomous.
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    It's an alternative way of commerce and a 
    very interesting way to resist and survive.
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    [bell ringing]
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    The slogan part of the poster, "Against the 
    Forbidden: The Streets of the Possible,"
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    refers to the neighborhood Tepito and the bigger 
    movement that really wants to take the streets as
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    a public place to demonstrate 
    or to act politically.
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    And some part of that kind of street culture 
    or community life is getting forgotten.
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    [violin music]
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    Art is totally connected to social change.
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    ♪ ♪
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    We don't have a way to measure 
    how art can impact society,
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    and that's good because that's 
    part of the freedom to do.
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    [soft electronic music]
Title:
Minerva Cuevas in "Mexico City" - Season 8 | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
13:15

English subtitles

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