Home > Muse > Little Miracles Oscar Munoz
Little

Little Miracles - Oscar Munoz

Jessica Chaney, Friday, 1st August 2008

I first saw Oscar Munoz’s Project for a Memorial (2005) in the Robert Storr-curated Venice Biennial in 2007. Projected across five alternating screens, Oscar Munoz’s
hand hurriedly paints water portraits on a hot pavement. Almost as soon as they are created, each face has already started to evaporate.

The installation stood out at the Arsenale amongst the pseudo-political screamers for being simple and unassuming, and the most effective. Both the subtlety of the piece, and the evident dexterity of Oscar Munoz’s lone hand moving in isolation across the screens provokes an unexpected commitment to this video art (unusual, I think, for the medium), as watching the artist at work proves fascinating.

The continuity of his approach is evident in the selection of his work, drawn from the
past decade, by the curators at Iniva for his first solo show in the UK.
The materials are raw and evident, and the techniques consciously tangible.
Somehow, as a result of this rather than in spite of it, Munoz achieves something
beautiful and mysterious. In the process he raises questions about the
nature of artistry, illusion, the iconic, and association and memory.

In Aliento (1996-2002), the spectator is invited to breathe on a series of mirrored silver discs and in the resulting mist the faces of otherwise invisible faces (that have been painted on with grease) are revealed.

The monotone pages from two leading Colombian newspapers are painstakingly
emulated in Paistiempo, 2007. But here, instead of minuscule printed dots (or
screen) that normally make a printed page visible, Munoz, with torturous diligence,
has burnt each dot into the page with a hot pin to create a far from exact yet totally recognisable illusion of text and image.

Munoz alludes to 50 years of political and social turmoil in his native Columbia but, in the great tradition of Latin America, he does this in a way that is both entertaining and awe inspiring. His works are little miracles, apparitions, and acts of worship and extreme devotion.

It is little wonder that since the art world at large discovered Munoz in Venice
last summer he is fast establishing himself as one of Latin America’s most significant living artists.

'Oscar Munoz: Mirror Image' ran from 13 June until 27 July at Iniva.

Pictured above: Narcissus by Oscar Munoz, 2001-02.
Three-minute single screen projection with sound.

Comments

There are currently no comments for this article.

Post a comment

Your comment:*

Your name:*

Your email address:*
(We won't publish this)

*Required information

Please click the button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

LATEST NEWS & COMMMENT

Spaced out

A recent exhibition in Nottingham showcases contemporary artists' exploration of the Communist-era space race.

Architecture - The return of classicism

Cast aside by Modernists for much of the 20th century, Classicism
has a comeback of sorts, with an excellent new book reappraising
architecture partnerships and a recent exhibition at one of the very
institutions that so derided the style.