Cristina Velásquez: As If It Were the Sun

July 16 - August 27, 2022
Public Opening: Saturday, July 16 from 11am - 4pm

Assembly, 4411 Montrose Blvd., Suite F, Houston, TX

 

Assembly is pleased to present As If It Were the Sun, new work by Colombian artist, Cristina Velásquez. This is Assembly's debut exhibition at our brick-and-mortar gallery in Houston, Texas. As If It Were the Sun extends the artist’s inquiry into the photographic gaze against issues of identity, history, and colonialism through photographs and photographic weavings made with cardboard. The straight, color photographs are purposeful fragments of larger narratives. Drawing the viewer’s attention to the reductive nature of the medium, this work opposes the photograph’s tendency to distill its subject’s intersectional relationship to the world into a single quality—often viewed from a Western perspective—“the sun.” For Velásquez, similar to identity, the function of the photograph is to explore rather than to define. It presents an opportunity for vulnerability, dialogue, and even collaboration. As If It Were the Sun reorients viewers away from a hegemonic view to a more nuanced position. Velásquez’s gestural crops imply that there is always more than what is presented.

Similar to traditional processes, each large-scale weaving is constructed by hand, revealing the presence of the artist’s body in the final object. The source material is re-appropriated paper or cardboard that is removed from its functional context and stripped of its original signifiers. Through detailed acts of labor, Velásquez imprints new meanings on an already-tired material, a process she views as an act of love. The violence and disruption evoked by the gesture of cutting are reconciled with the delicate and tedious effort of weaving, which heals, unites, and reveals new forms of beauty and knowledge.

In times when contemporary art more strongly reflects the conditions and aesthetics of virtual realities, and post-human theories abound, As If It Were the Sun presents a parallel art production that slows time down, appeals to our humanity, and deliberately uses processes that demand affection. The impulse that arises when experiencing a photograph begins in the mind, appealing to memory and the intellect. In the case of the paper weavings, this impulse starts in the body, with the desire to touch. Through this momentum, the viewer engages in an intimate experience of connection. The images and text stop “pointing to” and instead “become.” All the works in As If It Were the Sun become places of enunciation, spaces that are both visible and unseen, where identity rests. They are the path that the gaze travels in search of meaning; weavings that iterate infinitely.

Cristina Velásquez
Desde el otro lado, 2022
Archival inkjet print
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In Conversation: Cristina Velásquez & Lisa Volpe

Hear Assembly artist Cristina Velásquez and Lisa Volpe, the Curator of Photography at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, examine the artist's multimedia practice and her latest body of work, As If It Were the Sun.

This program was held and recorded on August 31, 2022.

Lisa Volpe is Curator of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Before arriving in Houston, she was the Curator of the Wichita Art Museum where she oversaw all areas of the museum's collection. Additionally, she held various curatorial roles at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA), and fellowships at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and the Cleveland Museum of Art. Her recent exhibition catalog, Georgia O’Keeffe, Photographer, was one of two finalists for the Association of American Publishers Prose Awards.

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Cristina Velásquez (Colombian, b. 1985) is an artist working primarily with photography and weaving. Her work examines postcolonial structures of power in Latin America, such as race, class, and labor distribution. She is interested in the way one culture translates another, and how inevitably, a dominant culture sanitizes and reduces the other in a subtle, and not so subtle, continuity of colonialism. Velásquez’s work resists this legacy from the perspective of her native Colombia. Most recent recognitions include Regeneration 4, Musée de l’Elysée, Lausanne (2020); the Light Work Artist-In-Residence program (2019); the Carol Crow Fellowship (2019); and the Kris Graves Projects, Lost II Book Prize (2019). Velásquez's work has been shown widely including exhibitions at Musée de l’Elysée, ICP Museum, ArtBo, MoMA PS1, International Center of Photography, and Houston Center for Photography, in addition to being held in numerous private and public collections.

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Vasantha Yogananthan: A Myth of Two Souls — September 9 - November 5, 2022

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Fumi Ishino: Tinted Lines — Assembly OVR — July 1 - August 31, 2021