- MUAC

Aranda’s work assumes the implications of defining ourselves in relation to time on different scales and planes. This conversation began with You Had No 9th of May!, in which the artist explores the arbitrary nature of the international date line and the decision of the archipelagic state of Kiribati to alter it in order to reverse the division of its territory into two temporalities. Her project Time Bank, a collaboration with Anton Vidokle, shifted her research to the realm of economic exchange and the possibility of infiltrating it through a form of trade determined by pleasure. Her more recent pieces incorporate scales ranging from the microbiological to the cosmic: from escapology, which drives our exploration of outer space, to the search for the universal particle and the lessons taught by our nonhuman terrestrial cohabitants.
 
That animal which gets bored and gives birth to time, that animal which interiorizes death, that ontologically narrative being…perhaps Burroughs was wrong and the virus that has infected us isn’t language but time, with all the debts this implies. Independently of whether this virus is of human design, Aranda reminds us that “laying a trap and escaping from one involve the same logic.”

 - MUAC

In energy terms, beyond our temporal fantasies and deliriums and the political operations that sustain them, all living beings exist in a state of flux, borrowing order from the universe and returning it as disorder. So wouldn’t it be better to learn to learn how to inhabit contradiction and confusion? Aranda’s conversations with Time offer a series of coordinates that orient us toward this goal.


Artist: Julieta Aranda (Mexico City, 1975)
Curatorship: Alejandra Labastida


National Visual Arts Production made possible by the fiscal incentive established in article 190 of the income Tax Law (EFIARTES).