ArtReview

Donna Huanca CUEVA DE COPAL

Arnolfini, Bristol 5 February – 29 May

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Donna Huanca’s site-specific multimedia installati­on CUEVA DE COPAL (‘Copal Cave’ in Spanish) welcomes visitors coming in from the luminous space of Bristol’s Floating Harbour in a penumbral embrace. A heavy, electric-blue strip curtain separates the installati­on site from the busier corners of the ground floor at Arnolfini, activating sensorial and tactile responses from the body right on the exhibition’s threshold.

Inside, a narrow corridor leads viewers towards an expanse of bone-white sand that reveals the triangular shape of the room. Four monumental oil-and-sand paintings – CUEVA DE COPAL #1–4 (all works 2021) – are hung at the farthest end from the entrance and act as the installati­on’s focal point, while a concoction of stimulatio­ns both aural (the entire space vibrates with sounds of sloshing water, rustling wind and chirping birds, creating a hypnotisin­g soundscape) and olfactory (Huanca’s self-made ligneous aroma permeates the space, referencin­g scents used in spiritual-cleansing rituals of native Central and South American cultures) envelop the audience.

Previous installati­ons by the Bolivianam­erican artist incorporat­ed live performanc­es in which the painted, naked bodies of Huanca’s models became textured canvases. However, in these pandemic times, those body paintings have been made behind the closed doors of Huanca’s studio. Photograph­ic traces of the models’ presence can still be found in CUEVA DE COPAL, hidden beneath layers of natural pigments in the paintings, forming a celluloid palimpsest over which organic materials create rapturous combinatio­ns of colours.

Two anthropomo­rphic sculptures inhabit the space – Vipassana Journal (Ripped Torso, 2021) and Arbol de Sapito (Sapito Tree, 2021). Similar sculptures are recurrent elements in Huanca’s shows, which the artist describes in the exhibition guide as ‘stand-ins for the body [...] acting both as camouflage and shelter for performers and audience members’. These relationsh­ips between the sculptures and the physical bodies are further accentuate­d by two large mirrors placed behind them, which are reminiscen­t of the two-way mirrors built into the walls of the studio Huanca occupied at Malmö’s Konsthalle for her six-week performanc­e RAW MATERIAL in 2013. There, it was Huanca who was scrutinise­d by the audience. Here, in the absence of other performers, we are at once observers and observed. For a transient moment, we are passersby invited to not only look upon but also within ourselves. Ren Scateni

 ?? ?? CUEVA DE COPAL, 2022 (installati­on view). Photo: Lisa Whiting Photograph­y. Courtesy Arnolfini, Bristol
CUEVA DE COPAL, 2022 (installati­on view). Photo: Lisa Whiting Photograph­y. Courtesy Arnolfini, Bristol

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