Sonoran Quipu is a sprawling sculpture composed of natural and human debris collected by individuals and organizations across Tucson, gathered from kitchens, gutters, artists’ studios, gardens, and streets. Transforming the museum into a studio, artist and poet Cecilia Vicuña alchemized these fragments—things deemed no longer useful, having been shed by a plant, broken by a child, or left in an alley—into a living installation. The exhibition also includes elements that offer a small window into the breadth of Vicuña’s practice: three videos, a sound piece, a little library, and the vapors of performances, rituals, and relationships Vicuña created while in Tucson. Sonoran Quipu senses the fragility of our world as climate change tilts us towards mass extinction. Weaving together plant and industrial materials, the artist invites viewers to consider the beauty and precarity of our world, and our interconnected relationship to the environment and each other.
The Sonoran Quipu combines the artist’s signature sculpture forms—the monumental quipu and the precario. A quipu (‘knot’ in Quechua) is an ancient Andean communication technology that uses knotted strings to record information, and was banned by the Spanish during the colonization of South America. Vicuña reimagines the ancient quipu system, incorporating contemporary materials to highlight its capacity to connect worlds and people. The artist’s sculptural precarios are described by the artist as simultaneously “about to happen” and in a constant state of dissolution. The ephemeral precario and the delicate universe of the quipu are composed of materials perceived as disposable, reclaiming meaning from waste.
This quipu is part of a new arc in the artist’s work that she defines as “a quipu of encounters” to map and hold networks of relationships. The first ones occurred last year at Organizmo, in Cundinamarca, Colombia, the Guggenheim Museum in New York and at the Tate Modern in London, and now here in Tucson.
Sonoran Quipu is a poem in space that gently sways in the wind and changes with the passing of time. This new commission expands on the ecological and cosmic themes at the center of Vicuña’s life practice. It is enlivened by collaborations and public programs that situate the installation as a living site for contemplation, knowledge sharing, and gathering.
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Sonoran Quipu is organized by Laura Copelin, Co-Chief Curator, with support from Alexis Wilkinson, Assistant Curator. Exhibition production led by Dominic Valencia, Exhibition Manager & Registrar with installation crew Wesley Fawcett Creigh, YeRin Kim, Alyx Lunada, Dan Uliaszek, Vikó Velázquez and MOCA Sonoran Quipu Fellows Heidi Blaine, Maria Celis, Amber Ortega, and Alaina Pierce.
Exhibition partner is The University of Arizona Poetry Center. Project collaborators are Daniel Borzutzky, Felipe Molina, Robert Villa, and Radius Books. Project contributors are ARC (Artist Residency Cooperative), BICAS, Center for Biological Diversity, Mission Garden, Native Seeds/SEARCH, Tohono O’odham Community College, and Tucson Waldorf School.
Major support for the exhibition is provided by The Diane & Bruce Halle Foundation; National Endowment for the Arts; The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; Arizona Humanities; and Lehmann Maupin. Generous support provided by VIA Art Fund and Wagner Foundation; Barrio Brewing Foundation; and MOCA Tucson’s Board of Trustees, Ambassador Council, and Members.
In-kind support provided by Barrio Brewing Company; Exo Coffee Co., Pearly Baker; and The Downtown Clifton Hotel.
Immense gratitude to everyone who contributed materials to the Sonoran Quipu.
Learn more on MOCA Tucson’s website.