Terra Preta at PROXYCO Gallery | New York

Terra Preta / Curated by Paulina Ascencio


Isa Carrillo, Circe Irasema, Lucía Vidales


8 March – 21 April, 2019


PROXYCO Gallery
168 Suffolk St.
New York, NY 10002






Lucía Vidales
Circe Irasema


Isa Carillo

Isa Carillo


photo credits: Zach Hyman
Images courtesy of the artists and gallery



History is written in soil and rock. We are living on top of millions of years of stratified knowledge; layers and layers of activity, experience, and wisdom constricted into the ground. To recognize the past, you have to look deep down. Ancient messages are hidden in strata. 

Along the Amazon basin, highly fertile charcoal-black soils tell the story of native communities experimenting to improve the quality of farming land. Terra preta do indio is the proof that they succeeded. These dark earths found in different parts of South America are the consequence of anthropogenic activity and thousands of years of preparation. A once barren territory transformed by the traces of human occupation: a combination of broken pottery and ceramics, bones, and organic matter left behind to compost and nourish the ground. 

Terra Preta presents the work of three Mexican artists to consider the sacredness of fertile soil and the relevance of ancient wisdom. Through depictions of Mesoamerican mythology and deity representation, the examination of the rituals and sageness of our precursors, and the construction of an underground imaginary, the exhibition aims to approach the intricate legacy of prosperity within black earth. 

Using embroidery techniques on stretched canvas, Isa Carrillo appeals to knowledge depiction presented in the form of sacred geometry. Combining basic shapes with a colorful palette, the artist reflects on the ideas and perceptions that original communities developed to understand the universe and its divinity. In the same line, the artist pursues the sophistication of this reasoning to approach the mysticism of mathematics and, specifically, the study of numbers and their meaning. This said, Carrillo relies on numerology as her own way of representation, portraying subjects and objects from the numerical amalgams that define them. 

Throughout her artistic practice, Circe Irasema has used carbon paper to copy archaeological and anthropological artifacts from books dedicated to Mesoamerican heritage. This process has left hundreds of used carbon sheets with hidden figures that can only be appreciated backlight. The selection of drawings that will be renovated several times throughout the exhibition explores notions of preservation and permanence through the integration of pottery pieces with coal to procure fruitful foundations. Continuing these reflections, Irasema created a series of papier-mâchéreplicas of pottery vessels that have been conserved in different Anthropology collections in Mexico, Chile, Peru, and Brazil. The artist painted the sculptures using vegetal and mineral pigments like achiote, goethite, Indian red and soot. Despite the great efforts to preserve them, these artifacts come from and will eventually return to the ground. 

Lucia Vidales’ paintings are inspired by representations of Aztec female deities: Tlazolteotl, the goddess impurity, filth, and sin; as well as Coyolxauhqui, who became the moon after being killed and dismembered for leading an attack against her pregnant mother, Coatlicue. Both deities relate to fertility and birth, however, they are also associated with misdemeanor, rottenness, and waste. Vidales explores the connotations of female energy as both destructive and generative, interpreting these archetypical depictions through bright colors, abstract backgrounds, and some figurative elements. 

-Paulina Ascencio