Current:Home > NewsWhen people are less important than beaches: Puerto Rican artists at the Whitney -Blueprint Wealth Network
When people are less important than beaches: Puerto Rican artists at the Whitney
View
Date:2025-04-15 05:08:43
One of the most striking pieces in a new exhibit of Puerto Rican artists wrestling with life after (and before) Hurricane Maria is a simple electric post, suspended in the air as if a hurricane had swooped it up, right that minute.
It's a commentary on the almost complete failure of the archipelago's electric grid after the hurricane five years ago. But because attached to the pole is a sign in Spanish — "Value your American citizenship. Vote for statehood" — it's clear that the piece also wonders: Where is the U.S. government? Why hasn't it solved this very basic issue of electricity?
Yet, would things have been better after the hurricane if Puerto Rico were a state? Some think not.
"We can talk about how Puerto Ricans are [already] citizens. So what kind of citizenship is citizenship?" asked Marcela Guerrero, the Jennifer Rubio Associate Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. She moved to New York from Puerto Rico not long before the hurricane.
Guerrero is the curator of the exhibit, called "no existe un mundo poshuracán: Puerto Rican Art in the Wake of Hurricane Maria." It means a post-hurricane world doesn't exist. And in this case a hurricane, she said, is a metaphor for a force you can't escape.
Much of this exhibit is about those forces — colonialism, mismanagement at all levels of government, climate change, earthquakes, and the failure of the power grid.
"It's just — this again. And again. It's an ever-perpetuating cycle of unjust conditions imposed on the daily lives of Puerto Ricans," Guerrero said. "I want people to understand that it's not just an inconvenience. It's not just you can't watch Netflix! You can't refrigerate medicines, [for example]. It makes living very hard."
There's a deep anger running through "no existe," a feeling that the United States has never had Puerto Rico's best interests at heart; that maybe the storm wouldn't have been such a historic disaster if the government didn't prioritize investing in beaches instead of basic infrastructure, and if it didn't seem to care more about tourists than about the people who actually live there.
Who is Puerto Rico for?
"B-roll," a video piece by the visual artist Sofía Gallisá Muriente, points that out by juxtaposing lush, tourist-office scenes of an island paradise with remixed field recordings from the 2016 Puerto Rico investment summit that extolled the archipelago to investors.
"I am optimistic for the long-term growth prospects for Puerto Rico," the video says, accompanied by electronic music composed by Daniel Montes Carro. "It has a perfect climate. You can minimize your taxes."
"I was really interested in, what are the images that are being produced to entice people to move or invest in Puerto Rico? And what do they say about us and how we offer ourselves to the world?" Muriente said. "And, you know, a lot of them are beautiful beaches with no people in them. A lot of them are, you know, beautiful landscapes kind of open for consumption, but without locals."
She said she just wanted to reveal "how sinister" those visual images could be. And they DO seem sinister, with men in suits looking down from helicopters at empty streets.
Listening in at the kitchen table
The exhibit, though, is not all tragedy. And much of it is very personal. The 20 artists, some living in Puerto Rico and some in the diaspora, explore love, hope and pride. There are posters of resistance in eye-popping colors by Garvin Sierra, a painting of another man-made disaster by Gamaliel Rodríguez, and photographic works by Gabriella N. Báez that stitch together her late father and herself with red string.
Mixed-media artist Sofía Córdova's video piece, part of a larger work looking at resource scarcity called "dawn chorus," starts with a cellphone video taken by her aunt. Rain and wind beat at the windows on the night the storm hits; the electricity is out. She narrates what she's seeing. "It's getting worse," she says.
The two-hour work has images of Puerto Rico post-hurricane, where you see flooded streets and broken residences. But it also shows quiet beauty: a lizard, a landscape. Through it all plays intimate interviews of Córdova's relatives, processing everything they've been through. It feels as though you are sitting around a kitchen table with them, listening to their stories. You get to know them as people who are thinking their way around a problem: what should they do now?
That's what Córdova intended.
Individuals sometimes become invisible during and after a disaster — they're just seen as collective victims. But in this artist's hands, they are full people, relating their experiences with all their contradictions.
"Caribbean peoples and marginalized peoples and oppressed peoples — our histories are never the ones that get put in the great archives," Córdova said. "So we witness for each other. And storytelling becomes such a foundational piece of struggle and survival."
"no existe un mundo poshuracán: Puerto Rican Art in the Wake of Hurricane Maria" runs through April 2023 at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.
veryGood! (3544)
Related
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Bible-quoting Alabama chief justice sparks church-state debate in embryo ruling
- Trump’s lawyers call for dismissal of classified documents case, citing presidential immunity
- Native American tribes gain new authority to stop unwanted hydopower projects
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Volkswagen is recalling more than 261,000 vehicles, including some Audis and Jettas
- Assembly OKs bill to suspend doe hunting in northern Wisconsin in attempt to regrow herd
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's Kiss At Her Eras Tour Show in Sydney Has Sparks Flying
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- CBP officers seize 6.5 tons of meth in Texas border town bust, largest ever at a port
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Man pleads guilty in 2021 Minnesota graduation party shooting that killed 14-year-old
- Winery host says he remembers D.A. Fani Willis paying cash for California Napa Valley wine tasting
- Hybrid workers: How's the office these days? We want to hear from you
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Eli Manning's 'Chad Powers' character getting TV series on Hulu, starring Glenn Powell
- Ohio mom who left toddler alone when she went on vacation pleads guilty to aggravated murder
- Herbstreit, Fowler to be voices in EA Sports college football game that will feature every FBS team
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Afrofuturist opera `Lalovavi’ to premiere in Cincinnati on Juneteenth 2025
Charlie Woods takes part in first PGA Tour pre-qualifier event for 2024 Cognizant Classic
Dolly Parton praises Beyoncé for No.1 spot on country music chart
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
Phone companies want to eliminate traditional landlines. What's at stake and who loses?
Taylor Swift announces new song 'The Albatross' on 'Tortured Poets' album
Wendy Williams diagnosed with primary progressive aphasia and frontotemporal dementia