Exposiciones
30 agosto 2024 - 05 enero 2025
Bergen Kunsthall / Bergen, Noruega
Installation view of Edgar Calel Ni Musmut (It's Breezing), 2024. Courtesy: Bergen Kunsthall.
Bergen Kunsthall presents an extensive exhibition by artist Edgar Calel, based in Comalapa, Guatemala. Working in a variety of media, Calel’s work celebrates the traditions and spirituality of his Mayan Kaqchikel heritage. His artistic approach is grounded in attentive relationships with the earth and its elements, playfully challenging Western conventions and perspectives of permanence. The works in the exhibition “Ni Musmut (It’s Breezing)”, made specifically for the spaces of Bergen Kunsthall, continue Calel’s engagement with the Mayan Kaqchikel cosmovision and the connections of its concepts and practices to other cultural contexts. The artist’s use of the Kaqchikel language and reflexivity of his presence in the places he travels belong to a practice that is celebratory of the daily role of spirituality among his people and vigilant of daily threats of exclusion and cultural erasure.
The title, “Ni Musmut”, refers to a mountain breeze close to the village Pa mumus in Guatemala. The breeze often brings a light rain that magically blurs the air – it creates a filter that diffuses vision, but creates a sense that something will happen.
The exhibition at Bergen Kunsthall presents several large-scale installations made with soil, rocks and fire that connect essential elements for jun k’obomanik, or giving thanks through offering rituals. Within these references to a geological and agricultural landscape, we find a series of hanging stones and a group of 76 ceramic pots filled with water, flower petals and accompanied by wooden sticks, titled Oyonïk paruwi Juyu’ (Invocation over the mountains) that allude to traditional cultural practices, but also open up to new readings in a changed context. The works are presented both as material and ritual – the artist and the team of Bergen Kunsthall will light candles under the rocks and take care of the altar-like pots each day upon opening the exhibition space. Calel’s works require entrusting devotional forms to an institution, and the artist views such collaboration as a means of opening these traditions while remaining in dialogue with ancestral practitioners. At the same time, the works challenge established notions of a work and its ownership and highlight the artistic contributions Calel’s community make to contemporary notions of ritual, performativity and ecological thinking.
Three large embroidery works depict scenes from the home of Calel’s family. The works, made in collaboration with members of his family, create a direct connection between the home – as a place for gathering and shared rituals – and the exhibition spaces, which are also spaces for social interaction and reflection. A selection of artworks by Calel’s artistic community and his family are presented in the smallest, most intimate gallery space, with a common theme of the garden, including intricate paintings of flowers and plants by his mother.
The exhibition is the first solo presentation by the artist in Europe.
Bergen Kunsthall Rasmus Meyers allé 5 5015 Bergen, Norway