Isaac MONTOYA |
|
||||||
![]() Fantasmas, Instalación en vía pública, Bienal de Singapur, 2008 ![]()
Singapore Biennale 2008
(11 September - 16 November 2008)
Introduction
On the facade of Raffles Shopping Centre in Singapore, looms the
large-scale photographic work of
Isaac Montoya.
The image is a rainbow-coloured portrait of a young woman, hair
seemingly in dread locks, her mouth open. The photograph pulstates with
a frenetic energy. Most of Montoya's artworks are amnipulated photographs that allow for
several layers of meaning. On one hand, he creates glossy, attractive
images often identified with consumerist iconography. These images are
reminiscent of those found in magazines, advertising billboards and TV
ads. All are slick - visual gratification, immediate; the bombardment of
the products' glories, relentless. Montoya's
photographs however lend several, alternate readings. By providing
screens or filters that reveal other images, he provides us with another
reality. A reality we would we would rather not see, or be be reminded
of. He ensures that the second (and third) portraits that are revealed
draw us into an uncomfortable place - one we would rather have remain at
arms length.
Montoya has been called a chameleon, a reference to his work and his
open person. He has created a female version of himself as Isa Montoya
(Montoya himself dressed as a woman), whose return to Spain is
chronicled in a parody of 'Hola' (re-titled by Montoya 'Ole') a Spanish
magazine dedicated to the idiosyncracies of the rich and famous. His
other photographs too are 'doubled', all are simulacra of realities that
border on mockery and social commentary.
For
the Singapore Biennale, Montoya's work Fantasmas (Phantoms) (2008)
contains several images that nudge us to think about the state of
contemporary word events. He layers three images, two of which areseen
through red and blue filters. Montoya has taken the imagistic spectres
from our subconscious - the portraits are glimpses of places around the
world where violence continues unabaited, where peace is still rooted in
the hope of its coming. The work's location in a busy consumer area
prompts people to face up to this situation. There is not one but
several realities, a variety of angles to everything and every event.
Text courtesy of Joselina Cruz and
Singapore Biennale 2008 ![]() ![]() ![]()
FANTASMAS, 2008. Instalación en vía pública.
En 2008 el
director de la Bienal de Singapur Fumio Nanjo
y la comisaria Joselina Cruz, quieren presentar una instalación mía en la
fachada del edificio Raffles, en el centro de Singapur. Desde un
principio se habla de la serie de trabajos con imágenes ocultas.
Hasta ese momento este tipo de imágenes se podía desvelar con un
solo filtro, bien rojo o bien azul. Para esta ocasión planteo un
proyecto nuevo en el que existen ocultas dos imágenes, una que se
revela con el filtro rojo y otra con el azul. Las posibilidades
temáticas y narrativas de duplicaban así. Aunque también surgían
problemas técnicos nuevos, con triples intersecciones de color que
llevaron a decenas de pruebas. Finalmente se presenta en la Bienal la obra Fantasmas, 2008. El espectador dispondrá de tres niveles de relación. Una primera imagen que podrá descubrir a simple vista con el rostro multicolor de una Drag Queen, símbolo de multiplicidad de identidades a medio camino entre el disfraz, el maquillaje y la ambigüedad personal. Al realizarse en la vía pública los filtros tendrán un protagonismo especial, entre la escultura y la funcionalidad urbana. Se plantean como unas cabinas donde el espectador puede entrar físicamente y descubrir otras realidades. Las imágenes ocultas revelarán dos lugares en conflicto, aún hoy, como son Irak y Afganistán. El grito de las victimas parece soterrado por el bullicio de un mundo de rascacielos, lleno de color y reflejos.
Instalación en el exterior del Museo Dojima River Forum. Biennale Dojima River Forum. Osaka. ![]() |