MoMA PS1

Daniel Lind-Ramos

El Viejo Griot — Una historia de todos nosotros

20 Apr - 04 Sep 2023

Installation view of Daniel Lind-Ramos: El Viejo Griot — Una historia de todos nosotros on view at MoMA PS1 from April 20 to September 4, 2023. Image courtesy MoMA PS1. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
Installation view of Daniel Lind-Ramos: El Viejo Griot — Una historia de todos nosotros. Shown, from left: Baño de María (Bain-marie/The Cleansing). 2018–2022; Ambulancia (2020) [Ambulance (2020)]. 2022–2023. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
Daniel Lind-Ramos. María de los Sustentos (Mary of Nourishment). 2021. Collection David Cancel. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
Daniel Lind-Ramos. El Viejo Griot (The Elder Storyteller). 2022–2023. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
Daniel Lind-Ramos. Ambulancia (2020) [Ambulance (2020)] (detail). 2022–2023. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
Daniel Lind-Ramos. Centinelas de la luna nueva (Sentinels of the New Moon). 2022–2023. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
Daniel Lind-Ramos. Centinelas de la luna nueva (Sentinels of the New Moon). 2022–2023. Photo: Steven Paneccasio
MoMA PS1 presents the largest museum exhibition to date of the work of multidisciplinary artist Daniel Lind-Ramos (b. 1953, Loíza, Puerto Rico). On view from April 20 to September 4, 2023, the exhibition showcases ten monumental sculptures and two video works that weave together the artist’s multi-layered practice, including four new large-scale works created for the exhibition. Based in Loíza, whose vibrant culture has been shaped by its Afro-Puerto Rican population, Lind-Ramos uses found and gifted objects of personal, communal, and regional significance—such as debris, decorative objects, and everyday tools—to produce meticulously detailed assemblages that explore the connected histories and enduring practices of local communities in Puerto Rico and Afro-descendent traditions throughout the Caribbean. Daniel Lind-Ramos: El Viejo Griot — Una historia de todos nosotros features works that honor fast-disappearing local customs of agriculture, fishing, cooking, and masquerade alongside landmark sculptures examine the repercussions of Hurricane Maria (2017), culminating with two large-scale works made within the last year that address the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact.

Both created for the exhibition, Centinelas de la luna nueva (2022–23) and El Viejo Griot (2022–23) explore how Puerto Rican identity has been shaped by more than 500 years of colonialism, cultural erasure, and environmental destruction. Centinelas de la luna nueva references the harvest of mangroves in the beach community of Piñones, considering the mangrove’s cultural, spiritual, and ecological importance as a protector against erosion and the effects of climate change. El Viejo Griot, or “elder storyteller,” draws inspiration from a character in Loíza’s annual Fiestas de Santiago Apóstol to invoke critical events in Puerto Rico’s history. Additionally, two new works created during the COVID-19 pandemic, Ambulancia (2020) (2022–23) and Alegoría de una obsesión (2022–23), incorporate objects like emergency lights and cleaning tools to explore collective experiences of trauma and loss.

Also on view is Lind-Ramos’s complete series of three monumental works, Las Tres Marías, which draws on the contradictions between Maria as a revered saint and the devastation and loss of Hurricane Maria, which forever changed the ecosystem of the island. Combining materials the artist collected after the hurricane with items given to him by friends and neighbors, Lind-Ramos’s works embody features of the storm—such as wind and lightning—while also referencing how communities in Puerto Rico came together in its aftermath.

Daniel Lind-Ramos lives and works in Loíza, Puerto Rico. He received a BA from the University of Puerto Rico and an MA from New York University. He was the recipient of a 2019 Joan Mitchell Foundation grant; the 2020 Pérez Prize; and a MacArthur Fellowship in 2021. Lind-Ramos has been featured in solo and group exhibitions globally, and his work is in major collections including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C.; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico, San Juan; and Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, San Juan.

Daniel Lind-Ramos: El Viejo Griot — Una historia de todos nosotros is co-organized by Kate Fowle, guest curator, and Ruba Katrib, Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, MoMA PS1, with Elena Ketelsen González, Assistant Curator, MoMA PS1.
 

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