logo
At This Architectural Gem, an Artist Was Present. Horses, Too.

At This Architectural Gem, an Artist Was Present. Horses, Too.

New York Times25-02-2025

One of the most anticipated events of an overstuffed Mexico City Art Week earlier this month promised to be a surreal collision of architecture, performance art, power, privilege — and horses. Marina Abramovic, the grandmother of performance art, would be presenting her latest works (though she would dispute recognizing them as such) at a house and horse stable designed by Luis Barragán, Mexico's famed midcentury architect.
As a well-heeled crowd milled in the corral at Cuadra San Cristóbal, the Barragán property just outside Mexico City, event staff passed out pink baseball caps printed with the words 'La Cuadra.' That is the new name of the property, which will become a cultural center.
Without fanfare, three brown horses emerged from the stables, their riders dressed in all black and carrying white flags emblazoned with the phrase 'Art Is Oxygen.' Behind them was Abramovic, dressed in black Comme des Garçons and accompanied by the Guggenheim Museum's curator at large of Latin American art, Pablo León de la Barra, who shaded Abramovic with a large red tasseled umbrella. Abramovic sat down in a chair on a small platform in front of the iconic Barragán pink wall.
The horses began to trot around Abramovic and León de la Barra. With camera crews, a drone and cellphones documenting her, she read her manifesto. Some highlights: 'An artist should have enemies. Enemies are very important'; 'An artist should die consciously, without fear'; 'Don't forget we have art, and art is oxygen.'
She concluded, 'We have lunch!'
Once the crowd was seated, at a long row of tables set with silver reflecting orbs, a woman in red approached. She was Abramovic's final performative intervention, an opera singer who sang the lunch menu. 'Taco, taco, taco, taaaacoooo,' she sang as a camera drone buzzed by. 'Aye, que rico.'
The two days of programming — there was also a one-day performance workshop — were meant to celebrate the announcement of the new La Cuadra cultural center, spearheaded by Fernando Romero, a businessman and architect.
But rather than offer a collaboration intermingling the vision of two great artists, one Serbian and other Mexican, and facilitated by this new cultural center and its sponsor, the two days served up a disorienting series of happenings that read more as a parody of the relationship between artist and patron. For all the secrecy and buildup to the big day, the most remarkable aspect was that Abramovic and Romero — representing Barragán's legacy — proved to be disinterested in each other beyond the most superficial clichés.
Abramovic's fame — and to some, notoriety — stems from her work pioneering performance art as a genre. Her early works tested the limits of her body, emotional endurance and relationship with the viewer. Her 2009 Museum of Modern Art retrospective and performance piece, 'The Artist Is Present,' in which she sat in silence for eight hours a day (over three months) and invited museum visitors to sit and gaze into her eyes, cemented her pop cultural standing.
She is 78 now, and just weeks before the Mexico City performance, she had undergone a second knee replacement. Romero, the former son-in-law of the Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, invited her to perform new works to celebrate the public announcement of his vision for La Cuadra.
The building was formerly known as the Egerstrom house, or as Cuadra San Cristóbal. It is an example of Barragán's signature 'barroco agazapado' style, which applied international modernist principles to vernacular forms of Mexican architecture while making liberal play of contrasting volumes of space and light.
Barragán, who died in 1988 at 86, layered his work with his Catholic faith. Window shades form crosses. Stairs seem to float to heaven. Gold leaf canvases are placed to catch and reflect light in ways that signal the divine. His use of a bright bougainvillea pink, now named for him, as well as primary yellow and blue accents are borrowed from his friend (and artist) Jesús (Chucho) Reyes. One of Barragán's innovations was to redeploy these Mexican folkloric colors as high modernism.
His unique blend of modernism, spirituality and human scale has inspired fervent devotion and in recent years attracted high profile interventions by international artists. One extreme example: The artist Jill Magid, for her 2016 conceptual work 'The Proposal,' exhumed the architect's ashes and sent a portion to be transformed into a life-gem diamond, which she offered to the owner of his professional archives as an exchange: 'the body for the body of work.'
Romero, who cited a similar devotion to Barragán since his architecture school days, has grand plans for the La Cuadra property. They include converting the house into a museum with exhibitions of Romero's design collection; assembling an art collection; starting an artist residency program; building a collection of pavilions designed by other architects, a library design prize; and more. The center is scheduled to open in October of this year, and the house will be open to the public for the first time.
Romero is best known for his work on the Soumaya Museum (which houses Slim's art collection), the unbuilt Bitcoin City in El Salvador and a Norman Foster-led redesign of the Mexico City airport (now scrapped).
For the Abramovic Method workshop on the first day at La Cuadra, participants (of which I was one) were greeted with a large photo banner emblazoned with an image of the artist, mounted on a white horse and holding a white flag. It was an image from her piece 'The Hero,' an autobiographical video and performance about her war hero father, Photoshopped against the property's pink wall. The banner stood tilting next to a black Mercedes G-Class.
We were asked to put our bags and jackets into boxes marked with our names. Donning matching white lab coats, we were given noise-blocking headphones, and asked to assume 'an attitude of monastic reverence.' The exaggerated blue door yawned open, and we descended into the corral, a camera crew and drone recording our procession.
Then Abramovic appeared. She was dressed in all black and her outstretched arms were punctuated by a red manicure. She cut a stark contrast against Barragán's brilliant pinks and ochers as well as the pale aqua of the pool designed for horses to cool themselves in the high-altitude sun.
She directed us to sit, surrender our cellphones and watches into a collection basket, and to approach in absolute silence the delicately chopped raw vegetables bobbing in shallow bowls of tepid beet-tinted water before us. 'Eat, eat while it's hot!' she said.
Under her direction, we practiced silent sitting, slow walking and eye gazing. Before the last exercise of the workshop, Abramovic addressed us: 'You must finish counting all the rice and lentils you take. Because if you cannot do the rice and the lentils, you cannot do life!' She then rose, said her goodbyes and disappeared through the hedges, leaving us to complete our task in silence. The La Cuadra team captain clapped. 'The Abramovic Experience has concluded,' she said. 'Please leave your lab coats and make your way to the exit.'
Abramovic did not consider her interventions in Mexico to be artworks — not the workshop, her talk or the manifesto she read while horses paraded around the corral (She did consider another project in Mexico an artwork: a commercial collection of wood and copper-tipped chairs entitled 'Elephant in the Room,' created with the Mexican design form La Metropolitana.)
'You know, it's something that I really hate,' Abramovic said a few days later during an interview. 'Everybody thinks everything I do is a performance. A manifesto is a manifesto. A lecture is a lecture.'
Yet her status as not just as a performance artist, but as the performance artist leads many viewers to consider all of her appearances as artworks. And given her Goop-like business ventures — Longevity Method wellness and skin care products, among others — it's hard to know where the line is between her spiritualism as artistic inquiry and enlightenment for sale.
This line was more muddied by the clunky collaboration with La Cuadra. Much of what on was on display felt like a best-of album. The manifesto was written in 1997, and has been recited publicly many times, according to her team. The workshop was an abbreviated version of the weeklong version she offers at her Abramovic Institute in Greece, which costs 2,500 euros per person. (This was a free mini version mainly for select Mexican artists.) And hiring an opera singer to sing a menu was related to her operatic piece '7 Deaths of Maria Callas,' but here was just 'an experience' for fun, her studio manager said, not a piece she considers an artwork.
Her work at La Cuadra did not in any meaningful way engage with the history of the house, Barragán's legacy or Mexico. And Romero and his curatorial team didn't really engage with Abramovic beyond cursory platitudes.
Ultimately, the collaboration felt more like an example of so-called adjacent attraction — a marketing concept in which a celebrity's embodied values are projected onto a product by association. With the timeless beauty of Barragán's work reduced to backdrop, the whole endeavor read as transactional. Not a great start for La Cuadra's future as a museum.
If there was spirituality here, it was more of a branded swag bag than an exploration of the human soul.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zoe Saldaña Says Emilia Pérez Oscar Is Trans
Zoe Saldaña Says Emilia Pérez Oscar Is Trans

Buzz Feed

time3 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

Zoe Saldaña Says Emilia Pérez Oscar Is Trans

It's been three months since Zoe Saldaña memorably took home the 2025 Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance in Emilia Pérez. The divisive musical, directed by Jacques Audiard, follows a transgender Mexican cartel leader named Emilia Pérez (played by Karla Sofía Gascón) as she seeks help from a lawyer (played by Zoe) to obtain gender-affirming surgery. Emilia keeps her transition a secret from her wife and kids, posing as the aunt of her pre-transition self. Months after its release, the backlash against Emilia Pérez grew further when the cast notably made no mention of trans rights as they accepted their controversial Oscar wins — despite the fact that the entire plot of the film centres around a trans woman's experience, and given the current terrifying political climate for trans folks. And with this in mind, people are now once again disappointed that Zoe — who still hasn't spoken out at length about trans rights — stated that her Oscar statuette 'goes by they/them.' This week, at the LA premiere of her new movie Elio, Zoe reflected on her Oscar win, saying, 'We have it in my office and my Oscar is gender fluid,' before adding that it's "trans.' 'funny cause she completely omitted any mention of the trans community during her acceptance speech,' someone wrote. 'had the whole press tour and many award show platforms to say something, ANYTHING about the attacks on trans people and this is what she comes up with months after her big (undeserved) oscar win. boo tomato boo,' another user echoed. Yikes. Let me know what you think in the comments.

MAGA Boxer Ryan Garcia Punches Back At Donald Trump: ‘I Can't Stay Silent…'
MAGA Boxer Ryan Garcia Punches Back At Donald Trump: ‘I Can't Stay Silent…'

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

MAGA Boxer Ryan Garcia Punches Back At Donald Trump: ‘I Can't Stay Silent…'

MAGA boxer Ryan Garcia has turned on Donald Trump and slammed the president over his administration's aggressive immigration raids in Los Angeles. Garcia has previously praised Trump as 'the best president' and shadowboxed for him during a visit to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida. He even once wrote on social media, 'Love you Trump,' and fiercely defended him in other posts. But on Thursday, Garcia ripped Trump in response to his controversial immigration crackdown that has sparked protests in L.A. and to which Trump has deployed the National Guard, a move that has been slammed as a major, unneeded and divisive escalation by critics. 'I may have voted for Trump, but I can't stay silent about what's happening with ICE in L.A.,' Garcia wrote on X, formerly Twitter. 'These aren't just 'illegals' or statistics they're people,' pointed out the Victorville-born and raised pugilist, whose grandparents were born in Mexico and who often enters the ring with both the American and Mexican flags. 'Hardworking immigrants, especially Mexicans, who pay taxes, raise families, build our communities, and are part of the people we love,' Garcia continued. 'Ripping them away from their homes is not just policy it's pain. We can have borders without losing our humanity.' Garcia was last year expelled by the World Boxing Council for using racial slurs during a livestream. He's also come under fire for anti-LGBTQ remarks. 'Daily Show' Audience Erupts Over Desi Lydic's Trump Parade Realization Trump Ducks 'Les Misérables' Character Question, Internet Brutally Answers It For Him Jimmy Kimmel Spots Exact Moment Trump's Mar-A-Lago Turned Into 'Insane Asylum'

12 ways Fort Worth has become a backdrop for filming TV shows
12 ways Fort Worth has become a backdrop for filming TV shows

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

12 ways Fort Worth has become a backdrop for filming TV shows

Stories by Fort Worth Star-Telegram journalists, with AI summarization Over the past few years, the Fort Worth area (with our authentic Texas vibe) has become a popular "set" for filming a range of TV shows. Taylor Sheridan's 'Landman' series makes use of local spots like TCU's campus and Hotel Drover. Real-life landmen in Fort Worth watched the series premiere at the American Association of Professional Landmen headquarters. Here's just a few of the TV series and scenes that have filmed around town. 'Landman' is set in the world of oil rigs and is the latest series from 'Yellowstone' creator Taylor Sheridan. | Published July 9, 2024 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia Texas landmen explain how close to reality is the job portrayed in the show. | Published November 18, 2024 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia Recognizable places and landmarks in and around Fort Worth were part of the show. | Published November 19, 2024 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia Viewers of the show can expect in-house Texas references in the series. | Published November 20, 2024 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The historic country club was one of several Fort Worth references made in the third episode of 'Landman.' | Published November 25, 2024 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The Mexican restaurant was featured in a scene with Jon Hamm's character. | Published December 31, 2024 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The ninth episode of the Paramount+ series also featured a cameo from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones. | Published January 6, 2025 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The tire shop proved to be an important location for Billy Bob Thornton's character. | Published January 14, 2025 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The show is is described as a cartel survival story from three different character perspectives. | Published January 24, 2025 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia Visit this Fort Worth coffee kiosk to get your drink from a barista in a bikini. | Published February 18, 2025 | Read Full Story by Ella Gonzales The Billy Bob Thornton-led series has been filming in Cowtown since late March. | Published March 31, 2025 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The new bill more than doubles the $200 million in incentives that Texas lawmakers passed in 2023. | Published April 17, 2025 | Read Full Story by Brayden Garcia The summary above was drafted with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in our News division. All stories listed were reported, written and edited by McClatchy journalists.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store