YA-BUNANMA-M-A-TA-TA: WHAT I SEE WHEN I DREAM

...Taking traditional cockfights in Nicaragua and Indonesia as their starting point, the works included in the exhibition explore transnational and transoceanic South-South connections, seeking to articulate, in the artist’s words: “a pathway for trans-border anticolonial queer solidarity.” Both films bring together human, animal and plant life, harnessing an interspecies awareness, building upon connections that extend beyond the immediate. The chicken is a perfect example in this sense, since the species originated in Southeast Asia and was brought to the Abya Yala by Dutch and Portuguese slave traders. Recent research however shows that Polynesian travelers had in fact brought the birds to the Pacific Coast of the soon-to-become ‘New World’ at least a century before Columbus’ arrival. This story of multiple origins and intercultural exchange enables Elyla to establish a trans-Pacific kinship, countering dominant Eurocentric narratives, by-passing 1492.

There is something both rebellious, and curative about these processes, where the aim is to build community, to hone in one’s strength. These are storiesborne out of struggle, have no doubt, but they are meant to also soothe and nourish, to bring some sense of ease, and to enable alternate futures, a queer utopia. As beautifully expressed by José Esteban Muñoz, we can “feel it [queerness] as the warm illumination of a horizon imbued with potentiality.” “[...] queerness,” he continued, “exists for us as an ideality that can be distilled from the past and used to imagine a future.” Yet that future might already be here. Elyla’s work articulates queerness in an active sense, going beyond its ideality, always becoming while also “palpable,” since it already exists in the popular realm, resoundingly alive, “en la calle,” on the street, where it has survived, and thrived against all odds. The task of the queer body, what it might accomplish through healing, Elyla explains, is precisely that act of transmutation, countering violence, reactivating memory through gesture, ritual, performance and dance.

These works are connected to Elyla’s long-term research into ancestral communal practices from their home region of Chontales and from the Pacific Coast of the territory referred to as Nicaragua, exploring performance and ritual through their popular manifestations and at the intersection with queerness, seeking to activate an anticolonial and decolonial praxis. The cock, observed through its potent associations with uninhibited masculinity, becomes the symbolic and formal device through which a quasi-alchemical process is activated whereby gender and societal norms are subverted. An “alquimia marica,” as expressed by the artist, a means to transmute matter and convert violence into pleasure, aggression into affection, hatred into love. It is no accident, of course, that such gestures are deemed necessary in a context that has been ridden by violence, inter-generationally. And, as Elyla shows, it has been specific bodies, Indigenous, Afro-descendant, female identifying, queer and non-binary, that have suffered the brunt of its force. Gender norms were strictly regimented within colonial regimes, and remain a root cause for systemic violence perpetrated against dissident bodies, unruly individuals, shunned by society...

— Ileana L. Selejan

Exhibition view, Ya-bunanma-m-a-ta-ta: What I See When I Dream
2024, Galerie Barbara Thumm

Cockfight (Fiesta de GallosGallinas)
2024
Ceramic, rooster feathers, wood, metal bars, natural pigment paint
Variable dimensions

PRAYER FOR TENDING DEATH

UNA ORACIÓN PARA ACOMPAÑAR A LA MUERTE

Prayer for tending death (Una oración para acompañar la muerte)
2024
Video, performance, installation
12m09s
Ed. 1/5 + 2 AP

Please contact artist for password

This work is an ongoing trans-oceanic artistic research project that deals with the transmutation of violence within the cock fighting phenomenon across different territories and cosmovisions. I’ve been deeply immersed in the process of creating rituals that would address the need of tending to our deaths. I tackle this through an anti-colonial lens and by creating collective ceremonies for gender and sexually diverse people. In the particular case of the “Prayer for tending death” I started visiting cockfights in Nicaragua after the 2018 uprising that left me with a lot of death taking root in my inner universe. I would take the dying roosters back to my house to honor their death as way to face the fear for the souls of the people I lost, transitioning to the ancestral realm. So I would give their blood to the earth, plug their feathers, cleanse them with sacred tobacco and share a meal with my queer sisters.

This became a way of transmuting the pain of the roosters and our own deaths in the community. Cock fighting has now become a patriarchal, capitalist violent bloodsport, removed from its original spiritual purposes dating back to the year 933 as an ancient tradition rooted in Balinese Hinduism which led me to create the piece Mirroring Lennger Gallo Gallina with my artist friend and sister Otniel Tasman from Central Java, Indonesia. My hope, as I keep learning and creating work in different territories, is to challenge the way we relate with traditions in order for them to move, change, evolve in a way that helps us navigate the world with more kindness responding to the needs of our realites

From the series ‘Prayer for tending death’
2024
Fine art inkjet print on Hahnemühle photo rag paper
105 cm x 140 cm, Ed. 1/5 + 2 AP

From the series ‘Prayer for tending death’
2024
Fine art inkjet print on Hahnemühle photo rag paper
165 cm x 100 cm, Ed. 1/5 + 2 AP

From the series ‘Prayer for tending death’
2024
Fine art inkjet print on Hahnemühle photo rag paper
165 cm x 100 cm, Ed. 1/5 + 2 AP

MIRRORING LENGER GALLO-GALLINA

A TRANS-OCEANIC DECOLONIAL RITUAL FOR ANCESTRAL CORPO-DIVINITIES

Mirroring Lengger Gallo-gallina (Espejo Lengger Gallo-gallina)
Elyla featuring Otniel Tasman
2024
Videoperformance
5m14s
Ed. 1/5 + 2 AP

Please contact artist for password

THIS IS WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE WHEN COCKS CRY(0)W

Today I talked to my rooster
And he said sadly
Why did you take care of me so much?
If today you throw me to death
Why did you take care of me so much?
If today you throw me to death

Hoy platiqué con mi gallo, song by Vicente Fernandez

This is what it looks like when cocks cry(0)w is a visual journey of two white fighting roosters who, during their fight, seem to dance, fight, embrace, and care for each other. This match was a tie, and both survived. This photo-journey is meant to bring hope amid the difficulties we face as humans, navigating our rights to freedom among imposed political borders that push us into a ring to fight, instead of into a space that nurtures care and freedom.

This is what it looks like when cocks cry(0)w...
2024
Photo series
11.7 in x 16.5 in, each
Photos by Alejandro Belli

Previous
Previous

Torita-encuetada

Next
Next

Tierra Retumbante