Deambular

Deambular (Wandering)
Artium, Basque Museum of Contemporary Art
Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
July 6th – September 2nd 2012

Praxis Project: Curated by Blanca de la Torre – Production coordination by Yolanda de Egoscozabal

Deambular – Actions in the public space of Vitoria-Gasteiz and in the exhibition space
Control center and exhibition space: Praxis, North Gallery, ARTIUM
Curators: Sergio García and Javier Abarca

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For Deambular (Wandering), Eltono has devised a series of formulas to produce work based on the everyday action of walking through the city, the ebbs and flows of the street and pedestrian interaction, formulas that will run for seven days prior to the exhibition’s inauguration and for seven days after. The artist uses these games to outline direct connections between the exhibition space and the public space, links that invite the viewer to stroll through the city and thus form part of the creative process. The Praxis exhibition hall will serve as a workshop and control centre, and at the same time as a space to display the documentation arising from the various experiments. (Abstract taken from the Museum website)

Deambular was my first solo show in a museum. As usual now when I have to show public space art in a private space, I created artworks in the street that were related with other pieces presented in the museum. Over the years, I have realized that in every project I do, I end-up walking a lot throughout the city; consequently, for the Artium project I decided to use this action of walking to generate my artworks. To do this, I developed two types of actions outside the museum:

1 – The Thumbtacks installation (Chinchetas): I installed compositions made with colored paper strips held together with thumbtacks on wooden surfaces. As the day passed, the pedestrians started tearing the papers and removing the thumbtacks. I registered every change until the pieces completely disappeared.
2 – Illegal street paintings: during five nights, I went out to paint in the street of Victoria.

These night actions generated a lot of movements: from observation, localization and exploration to action and documentation; including all the movements of everyday life such as going from the museum to the hotel, eating, buying material, doing an interview, having a drink… At the beginning of the project, I chose a color code (red: Monday; blue: Tuesday; yellow: Wednesday; green: Thursday; orange: Friday; violet: Saturday and white: Sunday) and I started to register all of my movements on a map; at the same time, while I was walking in the city, I stuck small round stickers in each corner I passed using this color code. This way, I recorded my paths on a paper and also marked them in the city so people could transit through or follow them.


Between the street and the museum, I produced 6 types of works:

1 – Thumbtacks, installations with paper strips and thumbstacks – in the street (10)
2 – Paintings in the street (6)
3 – Colored circular stickers marking the daily path – in the street (approx. 150 per day, total approx.: 1650)
4 – Paths Mural Painting (in the museum)
5 – Drawing generated by the Thumbtacks installations (in the museum) (25; 5 sets of 4 and 1 set of 5)
6 – Photographic enlargements of the street paintings (in the museum) (2)

Finally, as a testimony of the 12 days of work I spent in the museum room, we decided to leave my workspace in the same state as it was the last day.

Pictures below…

Two fanzines were edited by the museum: 1st Fanzine (English) and Final Fanzine (Euskadi, English, Castellano)
(Text and design by Javier Abarca, photos by Irene Moratinos)

An extended version of the final fanzine has been edited by Javier Abarca for Urbanario: Urbanario Fanzine (English)
(Text and design by Javier Abarca, photos by Irene Moratinos)

Links:
Artium Museum press release: np120706-exhib-praxis-eltono
ARTIUM presents Strolling, an urban art project by Eltono for the Praxis programme
www.artium.org/English/Exhibitions/Exhibition/tabid/336

The artworks generated by the Chinchetas installation are available for purchase through SC Gallery.

Chinchetas (Thumbtacks) Installation:

I installed simple compositions made of colored paper held by thumbtacks on wood surface around the city. The installations were slowly altered by the pedestrians. After observing their evolution, I generated 1/1 scale drawings that documented the different steps that we were able to register. It resulted in a series of six each containing four or five drawings depending on how many changes were recorded. The first drawing of each series is showing the composition in its first step, just like I installed it in the street. The last drawing shows the last step, an empty paper, symbolizing the total disappearance of the piece. On each drawing is written the place, date and hour of the registered changes.

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Illegal Paintings in the City:

For several nights, after working all day in the museum, I went out to paint in the street of Victoria. Out of the six paintings I did, we selected two and printed life-size photographs to fill two walls from top to bottom in the exhibition space. After that, we gave to the visitors the freedom to discover the other four paintings in the city by themselves.

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Paths Mural Painting:

Every morning on the museum’s wall, using the correspondent color, I painted the path I have been walking the day before. Using masking tape, the drawing was stylized and simplified. I added a rule: the more I transited a street during that day, the thicker I had to paint the line. This uncontrolled mural evolved everyday during the 12 days of the residency. The idea was to generate a wall painting in which the final appearance was out of my control and to appreciate the result as a whole abstract painting and not like individual maps.

I used a large paper map to transfer the daily paths from my notebook to the museum wall. This graphic transfer process generated a huge quantity of colored dots (the ones I was marking and following as guides to paint the lines on the wall). The large map proved to be a faithful replica of the map I was creating while sticking the colored dots everyday in the city. This large piece, called Matrix Map, was left on the floor of the museum in the middle of the room – the same place it could be found during the time I was working in the museum.

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Round Stickers:

The round stickers experiment was the most intense part of the project. I had to mark my path through the city at every moment, sticking round stickers in every street-corner I was transiting. On average, I stuck one sticker every 30 seconds while I was walking in the city. The idea was to observe how the colorful points were accumulating on the spots I transited the most; and at the same time, to mark my path so people could follow it. A different color was used for each day, using the same color code as for the mural painting.

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Exhibition Pictures:

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Somewhere inside the museum…

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Photographs: Irene Moratinos and Eltono
Many thanks to Sergio and Javier, Blanca de la Torre, Daniel Castillejo and Irene.

Path Mural

Deambular (Wandering)
Artium, Basque Museum of Contemporary Art
Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
July 6th – September 2nd 2012

Praxis Project: Curated by Blanca de la Torre – Production coordination by Yolanda de Egoscozabal

Deambular – Actions in the public space of Vitoria-Gasteiz and in the exhibition space
Control center and exhibition space: Praxis, North Gallery, ARTIUM
Curators: Sergio García and Javier Abarca

See the whole project here: www.eltono.com/en/exhibitions/deambular

Paths Mural Painting:

Every morning on the museum’s wall, using the correspondent color, I painted the path I have been walking the day before. Using masking tape, the drawing was stylized and simplified. I added a rule: the more I transited a street during that day, the thicker I had to paint the line. This uncontrolled mural evolved everyday during the 12 days of the residency. The idea was to generate a wall painting in which the final appearance was out of my control and to appreciate the result as a whole abstract painting and not like individual maps.

I used a large paper map to transfer the daily paths from my notebook to the museum wall. This graphic transfer process generated a huge quantity of colored dots (the ones I was marking and following as guides to paint the lines on the wall). The large map proved to be a faithful replica of the map I was creating while sticking the colored dots everyday in the city. This large piece, called Matrix Map, was left on the floor of the museum in the middle of the room – the same place it could be found during the time I was working in the museum.

Esto no es Graffiti

Cicus
Seville, Spain
May 8th – May 31st 2012

Project curated by Delimbo

What is graffiti? What is this thing called Urban art? Is this graffiti? Art? Where are the limits? Who sets them? Esto No Es Graffiti (This is not graffiti) is an exhibition about something called and labeled in many different ways; but in essence, is vivid and spontaneous creation, with disparate methodologies, millions of points of views, and no written rules. The only thing that remains clear is that this is not Graffiti. Graffiti is in the street and it’s free, enjoy it while it still exists – Esto No Es Graffiti, text by Seleka, curator of the show for Delimbo.

www.estonoesgraffiti.com

For the Esto no es Graffiti show, I presented three artworks, two of them in collaboration with Seleka.

Absence

360 x 330 cm, cut off drywall

The first artwork is called Absence. Based on the name of the show and reflecting on the issue of showing graffiti in private spaces, I drew shapes cutting the drywall that protected the original brick wall. The result exhibited was the absence of the artwork, thus claiming the street as its original base.

Calle Buiza y Mensaque 3

Seleka and Eltono
200 x 150 cm each piece – Spray on 300 gr Fabriano paper – Spray on wall and photographic print

The second artwork I showed, in collaboration with Seleka, was also a reflexion around the act of showing graffiti in an exhibition space. We produced a drawing on paper and an illegal painting in the street. The painting in the street was the negative shape of the one on the paper. Inside the exhibition, we hung the drawing along with a life size picture of the illegal piece in the street.

Rompecabezas (Puzzle)

Seleka and Eltono
400 x 200 cm, wood and spray paint

For the third artwork, we assembled a wooden collage on a wall and worked on top of it; first I started with tape and then Seleka used paint. Once the piece was finished, we asked Marcos, who was in charge of installing and assembling all of the pieces in the show, to disassemble the piece and reassemble it in a different order. We did not interfere in the composition of the piece and let chance and the assembler’s criteria decide the final appearance. The idea of not controlling the final result of the work is inspired by the deterioration that can be observed in the pieces painted in the city: factors out of the artist’s control change a painting gradually until, in most cases, it disappears completely.

Photographs by Delimbo and Eltono
Thanks to Laura and Seleka, Marcos and Domingo

Caballo Caballo Tigre Tigre – 马马虎虎

Sanlitun North Street 81, Chaoyang District, Beijing, China
May 2012
Organized by Migas with the support of the Instituto Cervantes de Pekín and Nali Patio

The third Equipo Plastico’s exhibition was held in Beijing. As usual now, we stayed for a month residency, walking, visiting and observing the city. We created artworks inspired in our daily experiences. Unlike the previous two exhibitions, in Peru and Mexico, in China we faced a cultural and linguistic barrier much bigger; but that barrier did nothing but turn the project into a more intense and enriching experience.

The complete documentation about the project is published on the official Equipo Plástico website: www.equipoplastico.com/projects/caballo-caballo-tigre-tigre/caballo-caballo-tigre-tigre-en

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Duotone

Oz.
Oudezijds Achterburgwal 66, Amsterdam, NL
March 24th – April 24th 2012
Curated by Stickit

Process:

Result:

Exhibition:

Duotone prints are for sale in the Boutique.

Eredu

SC Gallery
C/ Cortes 4, Bilbao, Spain
October 7 – November 25 2011

SC Gallery invited me to Bilbao to paint a mural for the BLV-art festival and to set-up a show in their gallery. This festival took place in Bilbao la Vieja neighborhood. I called the show Eredu which means “model” or “pattern” in Basque. My idea was to showcase different works all made using varying techniques that together highlight a common and characteristic pattern. The artworks presented were: four photographic enlargements of illegal paintings I had done in the street during my stay in Bilbao, mounted on dibond; five confetti and double sided tape compositions on Super-Alfa paper; thirty 10×15 cm documentation pictures of the mural I painted in Urazurrutia street #20; two prints out of my new Confetti edition and a painting on the rounded wall inside the gallery.

If you are interested in purchasing any of these pieces, please contact the gallery: www.scgallery.es

Mural painting in Urazurrutia street #20

Sala de Arte Joven 2.0

Sala de Arte Joven de la Comunidad de Madrid
Av. América 13, Madrid
De abril a agosto 2010

Comisariado por Isra Souza y Rafafans

El proyecto se basa en materializar en un espacio físico, como es la Sala de Arte Joven, la gran fuerza de las dinámicas relacionales que se experimentan en las redes sociales de internet y la llamada web 2.0.

Portales como Facebook, Tuenti, Myspace o YouTube, se crearon como “páginas blancas” con una arquitectura capaz de incorporar las aportaciones de los usuarios. Son los usuarios los que aportan el contenido y, a la vez, otros usuarios los consumen y tienen capacidad de sobreescribirlos, incorporarlos y modificarlos, generando otro tipo de valor.

Estas herramientas de producción del saber colaborativo (cuyo arquetipo es la Wiki) afectan de una forma muy profunda y duradera la manera en que se puede producir la cultura. Y eso no sólo se tiene que aplicar en el mundo de internet. Se trata de una verdadera revolución en el modelo de producción, un cambio profundo en la estructura del modus operandi de una sociedad y sus dimensiones culturales, sociales y económicas, basados en unos nuevos principios de la competencia, como son la apertura, el intercambio y la acción global.

Sala de Arte Joven 2.0

Desarrollo del proyecto

Los artistas participantes en esta experiencia son Jacobo Castellano, Pablo Grandegraphix, Eltono, Juan López y Nano 4814. Todos ellos trabajan con unos formatos y tipologías de obra en la línea de las intervenciones artísticas en espacios específicos (site specific), con un lenguaje muy escultural, lo que posibilitará la materialización formal de esta experiencia en la Sala.

En esta ocasión, los artistas actúan como “webmasters” para dirigir, coordinar y gestionar las acciones y tareas necesarias para la producción de una obra artística mediante la actuación de un grupo colaborativo de usuarios/consumidores de cultura.

Es decir, que la Sala de Arte Joven se transforma en una plataforma de participación social, en un proceso por el cual, los propios usuarios y consumidores de cultura tienen posibilidad de participar en la producción del propio “producto artístico” a través de una red social colaborativa dirigida por los artistas, cuyo objetivo es materializar en una “obra de arte global” las dinámicas relacionales de internet.

De abril a julio de este año, los grupos de trabajo se sucederán en el montaje de sus instalaciones, en un proceso acumulativo, de tal forma que el material producido por un grupo será contenido de reflexión y actuación del siguiente, estableciéndose así un diálogo (o metadiálogo) entre todos los participantes. Este modelo de conversación, en una dimensión superior a la del propio acto de producción, es el reflejo material de los nuevos paradigmas de la web 2.0.

El resultado final de todo este proceso participativo, se podrá ver durante los meses de julio y agosto y será una “obra de arte global” que materializa varios conceptos básicos de un proceso de co-creación: la inteligencia colectiva, la disolución de la autoría y la democratización de la cultura.

Gracias a la increíble ayuda de mi grupo de trabajo (participaron en total más de 20 personas), desarrollamos 7 proyectos en la sala.

Enlaces directos a las galerías de fotos:

1 – Script 1.2
2 – Confeti v2
3 – Astillas 2.0
4 – Ropa de Trabajo #3
5 – Vitrina/Muro
6 – Pintura Invisible
7 – Torno Cromático

Script 1.2:

El primer experimento, Script 1.0, tuvo lugar en el Centro Cultural de España en Buenos Aires en abril del 2010. El Script 1.1 en galería Delimbo en Sevilla en abril. Con la misma idea inicié Script 1.2 para la expo Sala de Arte Joven 2.0. Se trataba de pintar la pared más grande de la galería entre todos los participantes del grupo de trabajo. Cada colaborador tenía un color asignado y tenía que pintar rayas según unas normas precisas y así se hacía ejecutor del script y a la vez espectador de como se iba pintando “automáticamente” el mural.

Marcamos una cuadricula en la pared y cada colaborador eligió su color. Antes de empezar a pintar se iba sorteando las coordenadas de cada línea (x,y) para saber su punto de arranque y su dirección.

Entre 12 personas pintamos 30 líneas de 12 colores distintos en 7 días.

Video:

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Confeti v2:

Un aspecto importante de esta exposición era la posibilidad (o el deber) de reutilizar las obras de los artistas anteriores. Antes de mi, Pablo Grandegraphix, por una magnifica casualidad uso uno de mis materiales preferidos, el confeti!

Marcamos una cuadricula en la pared de la sala de arriba, definí las formas geométricas que se podían usar y con unas reglas sencillas los colaboradores prepararon la pared con cinta doble cara. Fue muy interesante ver como los colaboradores interpretaron mi trabajo a su manera, de todo el proyecto, es la obra que más me sorprendió.

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Astillas 2.0:

Retomando el concepto de la exposición que presente en Lima en junio del 2008 (www.eltono.com/en/exhibitions/astillas) hicimos literalmente astillas con las instalaciones de los artistas anteriores. Cada colaborador tenía que seguir unas reglas sencillas (solo podían pintar tres formas geométricas utilizando un máximo de tres colores planos) y fueron recortando y pintando piezas de madera para la creación de una obra grande interactiva que se fue formando y modificando según los aportes de cada colaborador. De esa forma con cada obra particular se construyó una gran obra global de la que nadie podía controlar el avance. Una vez la exposición abierta al público, la obra podía seguir siendo modificada por los visitantes.

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Ropa de Trabajo #3:

Cada colaborador tenía que venir con ropa de trabajo que se podía ensuciar y de esa forma entraba a formar parte de R.D.T #3.

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Vitrina/Muro:

La idea era de pintar la vitrina con blanco de España y utilizarla como un muro donde cada uno pueda escribir con el dedo en su parte exterior. Como en las redes sociales, los colaboradores podían escribir libremente en la vitrina/muro y poco a poco se fueron sumando los espontáneos de la calle que también iban dejando sus mensajes.


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Pintura Invisible:

Cuando invité a Julio Jara para participar en la exposición como colaborador, enseguida me propuso hacer una intervención con sus alumnos del taller “A Ciegas” (un taller de performance para personas ciegas o con deficiencia visual). Intervinieron el día de la inauguración en la sala de arriba y, vestidos con monos blancos, exploraron el espacio con sus bastones convertidos en pinceles. De esta forma, se realizó un mapa del espacio explorado a través de la imagen abstracta.

Más info: www.hablarenarte.com

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Torno Cromático:

Como última pieza, reutilice el torno que Jacobo Castellano construyó inspirándose en los tornos de los claustros de monasterios. Lo transforme en un instrumento de mezcla cromática desviándolo totalmente de su inspiración inicial.

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Muchas gracias a: Carmen y Tono (el verdadero), Julio, Ana Paula, Jaime, Clara, Hoffa, Lore, Mónica, Rafa, Rocío, Guillermo, Pablo, Laura, Dani, Sierra, Tere, Bea, Elsa, Parsec, Jesús, Alvaro, Dane, Isra, Rafafans, María, Pepito, Encarna Fernández, Justo Sánchez-Manzano, Ana Isabel Illanes, Emilio Camacho, Eduardo de la Fuente…

Script 1.2

Sala de Arte Joven de la Comunidad de Madrid
Av. América 13, Madrid
April to August 2010

Curated by Isra Souza and Rafafans

The full report of the exhibition can be consulted here: www.eltono.com/en/exhibitions/sala-de-arte-joven-2-0

The first Script experiment, Script 1.0, took place at the Spanish Cultural Center in Buenos Aires in April 2010. Script 1.1 was run in Delimbo Gallery in Seville in April 2010 as well. With the same idea, I started Script 1.2 for my show in Sala de Arte Joven 2.0. The idea was to paint the largest wall in the gallery between all participants. Each collaborator chose a color and painted stripes following precise rules. Thus each individual executed the script while at the same time watched as the mural was “automatically” painted.

A grid was marked on the wall and each person chose the color they wanted. Before beginning to paint, a random process was used to give each person a coordinate for their line (x, y) so they would know their starting point and direction.

Over the course of 7 days, 30 lines were painted in 12 different colors by 12 people.

Video:

Thanks a lot to: Carmen y Tono (el verdadero), Julio, Ana Paula, Jaime, Clara, Hoffa, Lore, Mónica, Rafa, Rocío, Guillermo, Pablo, Laura, Dani, Sierra, Tere, Bea, Elsa, Parsec, Jesús, Alvaro, Dane, Isra, Rafafans, María, Pepito, Encarna Fernández, Justo Sánchez-Manzano, Ana Isabel Illanes, Emilio Camacho, Eduardo de la Fuente…