Sikkema Malloy Jenkins
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Editions
  • Art Fairs
  • Publications
  • News
  • Gallery
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Cart
0 items Mex$
Checkout

Item added to cart

View cart & checkout
Continue shopping
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Menu

Editions

william córdova, machu picchu after dark (pa' victoria santa cruz, macario sakay y Damion thurston), 2003-22 NSU Art Museum_Fort Lauderdale installation

william córdova Lima, Peru, born 1969

machu picchu after dark (pa' victoria santa cruz, macario sakay y Damion thurston), 2003-22
200 found speakers, additional various materials determined by artist on installation
Dimensions variable
Inquire
%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22artist%22%3Ewilliam%20c%C3%B3rdova%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22title_and_year%22%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_title%22%3Emachu%20picchu%20after%20dark%20%28pa%27%20victoria%20santa%20cruz%2C%20macario%20sakay%20y%20Damion%20thurston%29%3C/span%3E%2C%20%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_year%22%3E2003-22%3C/span%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22medium%22%3E200%20found%20speakers%2C%20additional%20various%20materials%20determined%20by%20artist%20on%20installation%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22dimensions%22%3EDimensions%20variable%3C/div%3E
william cordova’s multimedia practice engages cosmology, metaphysics, revolutionary literature and music, and Pre-Colombian history to explore cultural hybridities across time and space. Born in Lima, Peru, cordova was six years...
Weiterlesen
william cordova’s multimedia practice engages cosmology, metaphysics, revolutionary literature and music, and Pre-Colombian history to explore cultural hybridities across time and space. Born in Lima, Peru, cordova was six years old when he first traveled to the United States; his family eventually settled in Miami and he has since lived in a number of major cities throughout the country. These experiences, of shifting environments, of taking and leaving behind, inflect the themes of displacement and communication explored in his work. Memories and histories intertwine, provoking a constellation of visual signifiers, cultural references, latent messages, and spiritual systems.

"machu picchu after dark" is a monumental structure composed of stacked speaker boxes and various integrated found materials. cordova began the sculpture in 2003, and has presented it in modified, unique incarnations since. It’s composition calls to mind famed Incan sites, such as the titular Machu Picchu and Ollantaytampo, while the use of recycled boxes comes from cordova’s childhood memory of seeing cast-off speaker boxes on the streets of Miami while taking a walk with his father. At the time, he mistook the speakers for cajones, a late-eighteenth century Afro-Peruvian drum originally fashioned by slaves from Spanish shipping crates and popularly played throughout the Americas by the nineteenth century. Within these lineages of transformative repurposing, the collected refuse woven through cordova’s work is no longer simply mundane detritus, but artifacts of our own existence.

The fifth iteration of "machu picchu after dark" was commissioned on the occasion of the Seattle Art Museum’s 2013 exhibition, Peru: Kingdoms of the Sun and Moon. The two hundred speakers in this version were all collected around Seattle. A small accumulation of LPs, books, small stones, and other used items, also sourced from the city, are arranged in front: an intimate, vernacular shrine to the everyday sounds and movements of the streets. The towering silence of the defunct speakers becomes its own soundscape, a conduit through which the LPs evoke imagined chords, lines of melody, and ghosted echoes throughout the room. While the thesis of the show aligned with cordova’s own background and interest in Andean architecture and contemporary material creation, the inclusion of machu picchu after dark introduced its own multiplicity of readings into the exhibition’s larger framing of Peruvian national and cultural identity. Built from a transtemporal, transregional “sampling” of materials and visual languages, cordova’s adaptive sculpture responds to the erasure of African influence and presence, including the experience of slavery, from Caribbean and South American histories. "machu picchu after dark" unearths the trace links between the Americas and Africa in a mélange of musical associations and sociocultural intricacies, transmitting the reverberations of the past into our sonic present.
Details schließen

530 West 22nd Street
New York NY 10011

gallery@smjny.com
212 929 2262

Mailing List
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Datenschutz
Manage cookies
Copyright © Sikkema Malloy Jenkins
Site by Artlogic

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Reject non essential
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Mailing list sign-up

Subscribe

* denotes required fields

In order to respond to your enquiry, we will process the personal data you have supplied to communicate with you in accordance with our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.