C& América Latina: Your work reexamines and cultivates the ancestral artistic technique of the Tables of Sarhua, a district located in Ayacucho, Perú. Could you tell us about the origins of the tables and how their stories have changed today?
Venuca Evanán: The Tables of Sarhua originate from the district of Ayacucho, in the Víctor Fajardo Province. The ceremony is called Tabla Apaycuy, which means “the table offering,” since they are given as gifts when a home is built. The exact date when they began to be made is unknown, but tables from the 1800s have been found. Their original size varies from two to four meters long and they are panels made from tree trunks where the family that receives them as a gift is registered. They are read visually from bottom to top. It begins with the dedication, then continues with the Virgin of the Assumption, and from there come the owners of the house, their immediate family and on top their extended family. Imagine that you are from the community and that you’ve gotten married. They have helped you to build your home and you choose the godparent who gives you the panel.
Then, you place it in a private place where only you and your partner can enter. For that reason, they have remained hidden for many years. If you are a very sociable person you can receive up to four tables. But if you are not, you will probably receive only one.
My father, Primitivo Evanán and my maternal uncle, Víctor Yucra are the ones who started painting Sarhua Tables in Lima. My father tells me that, as always, migrants return from the city to their communities on holidays to reunite with friends and families. On one of those trips, he met the intellectual Salvador Palomino, who inspired him to paint his own tables. That was how, together with my uncle, they created the first exhibition for the Sarhuan residents in Lima. Later, and thanks to the help of gallery owner Raúl Apesteguía, they held the first exhibition of original tables in the city center. In their second exhibition, the formats, themes and materials began to change. Originally, the materials were earth tones, but they adapted the materials of the capital and started using colored pencils, markers, anilines and acrylics. Additionally, they began to paint pictures and to record traditional themes of the town, tales, myths, legends, festivities, internal migration, as well as political events in the country.