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Ana Mendieta at Tate Modern: An Irresistible, Primeval Force

Ana Mendieta at Tate Modern: An Irresistible, Primeval Force
Ana Mendieta exhibition at Tate Modern showcasing earth-bound art
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Tate Modern's latest exhibition presents the profound, earth-bound work of Cuban-American artist Ana Mendieta.

It captures her unique ability to leave an indelible imprint on the world using primal elements.

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The show is an engrossing, irresistible presentation.

It positions Mendieta as an artist who would be at the absolute forefront of this century's art had she survived.

Exhibition Overview

The exhibition opens outside the Blavatnik wing with a massive color photograph of a ruined ancient site. This immediately signals a departure from standard contemporary art presentations.

Born in Havana in 1948 and exiled to the US at age 12, Mendieta channeled her feelings of cultural displacement into excavating the very origins of mythology.

Her medium choices—blood, feathers, flowers, and sand—feel like raw, new inventions rather than ancient materials.

Her performance pieces involve drawing human silhouettes with gunpowder on tree trunks and setting them ablaze. The scorched shadows are reminiscent of Pompeii victims entombed in ash.

Mendieta's narrative frequently merges her own body with the landscape.

Photographs document her covered in mud against a tree bark or decaying as a universal, totemic mud figure in a pool of water.

Despite the solemnity, the exhibition highlights her wit.

Her early work includes trying on a florid moustache to explore identity, or pouring animal blood on a sidewalk to secretly photograph the puzzled, disturbed reactions of passersby.

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Editors Team
Author: Kenes Jatmika
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