SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Justo ahora (proper now), María “Lulú” Varona’s second solo present at Embajada gallery, presents cross-stitched and embroidered works that meditate on native considerations reminiscent of femicide and environmental destruction, affirming the political potential of solidarity.
Varona’s works are sometimes enclosed by a porous chain of multicolor shapes that recall human figures, suggesting the need of collectivity in overcoming frequent struggles. In “Sin amor no hay revolución” (With out love there isn’t a revolution), for example, the artist references our bodies of water in danger attributable to company pursuits and human exploitation: A banner studying “Salvemos Playuela” (Let’s Save Playuela) invokes the ecologically wealthy area of the island nation, and sandy coastlines are joined by silhouettes of child turtles in addition to figures gathered round a campfire.
In the meantime, “Agroecologíapr.com I” and “Agroecologíapr.com II” communicate to the grassroots motion to shift away from sole dependency on United States imports and towards impartial farming to help the archipelago’s inhabitants, which has grown prior to now six years. The work depicts a proliferation of flowers, a queen bee flying beneath the solar, and figures tending to the soil, reminiscent of farming practices that predate the US’s destruction of native crop industries within the twentieth century in a lot the identical approach that Varona’s stitching observe preserves and cultivates artisanal traditions that predate US intervention.
“Cuanto más” (What number of extra) differs from different works on this present in that it feels extra like a name to motion. Within the work, numerous figures carry picket indicators; two maintain up a inexperienced bandana, symbolizing the Campaña Nacional por el Derecho al Aborto Authorized, Seguro y Gratuito (Nationwide Marketing campaign for the Proper to a Authorized, Protected and Free Abortion) based mostly in Argentina. She excludes the chain of collectible figurines from this work, emphasizing the work that must be performed to attain the camaraderie and peace that border suggests. Varona’s portrayal of protests attracts consideration to the alarming quantity of femicides in Puerto Rico, a problem that continues to foment frustration and mistrust within the authorities.
As a result of Varona scatters symbols and objects all through her canvases at numerous scales and views, her compositions recall the visually playful floating landscapes of handheld video video games like Zelda or Pokémon. Certainly, Varona inserts herself into them not as a major character, however as somebody who bears witness to those points. Her avatar bikes via every bit as if all had been minimize from the identical material, alluding to the truth that the struggles depicted in all her compositions are entwined.
Justo ahora (proper now) continues at Embajada (354 Cll Fernando Primero, San Juan) via August 24.