the beautiful game: art and sport in the work of humberto vélez
Transcription
the beautiful game: art and sport in the work of humberto vélez
30 THE BEAUTIFUL GAME: ART AND SPORT IN THE WORK OF HUMBERTO VÉLEZ by Elizabeth Matheson and Emelie Chhangur C105 Spring 2010 A rt and sport: the two do not sit easily together. Rather, it’s the opposite: they suggest either a non-relationship—meaning the terms have simply nothing to do with each other—or they suggest an incongruous 1 Sonia Hughes, Humberto Vélez 8th Residency Project at Persistence Works Studios http://www.artspace.org.uk/ documents/SoniaHugesonHumberto Velez.pdf. May, 2007 Humberto Vélez, Dreambody (Mister Regenta), 2008, Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain photo: len grant pairing—they point in different or opposite directions. Yet, art has long been present in sport, and many artworks have been inspired by, or at least allude to, sporting matters. In the early 20th century, organized sport made an attempt at cultural inclusion, known as “athletic Ruskinism,” which was seen as important by Pierre de Coubertin, the figure generally acknowledged as the founder of modern Olympicism. A disciple of the British public school cult of athleticism, de Coubertin avoided the philistinism of the creed, opting for projects in which sport and arts formed a holistic partnership. Some examples of this woolly Utopianism were featured in the 1912 Stockholm Olympics, which included competitions for music, literature, painting, sculpture and architecture alongside athletic demonstrations. However, the intersections between organized sports and the arts in the Americas have a deeper history. A millennium before the advent of the Greek Olympics, Meso-American ballgames, their architectural court spaces and their depiction in painting, sculpture and ceramics were part of major centres from Paraguay through the Caribbean to the upper reaches of Mexico. Historically, poetry, songs and literature glorified the talents of athletes but there is also a tradition of not simply depicting sport as a spectacle but as a means to represent social and psychological conflict. One just needs to think of the boxing plays of Eduardo Pavlovsky, Vicente Leñero and the novels of Isaac Goldemberg on soccer and José Agustín’s writings on baseball. In addition, Latin American contemporary artists have been recuperating and revindicating sporting forms such as cricket, soccer and other ball games to use them to address social and political issues from authoritarianism and censorship to sexuality. Humberto Vélez is one such artist. Since 1995, Vélez has been creating projects collaboratively with social groups, often turning particular areas of cities into artistic territories by regenerating urban spaces and social relations. Far from being another relational turn, Vélez’s aesthetic approach extends from a cultural modernity that is particularly Latin American and Caribbean. These deeply rooted cultural traditions eclipse the recent relational aesthetics theorized in Europe, as evidenced by earlier 20th-century projects. Such projects include Cuba’s Revista de Avance group (which looked to Hispanic literary culture to re-enchant the modern aesthetic experience with beauty and inventiveness); post-war Brazilian artistic avant-garde artists such as Lygia Clark, Hèlio Oiticica and Lygia Pape (who in the late 1950s rejected the extreme rationalism of abstraction to create more sensorial, participatory work that appealed not only to the mind but also to the body); and the following generation of Latin American artists who came of age in the 1960s and 1970s (including Renè Francisco [Cuba], Cildo Meireles [Brazil] and the many others whose politically engaged works were based on principles of de-centering mirroring the extreme political situation in Latin America). As an inheritor of this rich multiple legacy, Vélez uses aesthetics as a means of expression for sensation that generates self-awareness and critical thinking, which come together to form a meaningful present experience. As British Caribbean spoken word artist and playwright Sonia Hughes puts it, “When he engages with his collaborators in his participative works, he walks alongside them and largely they accept him as they are rarely of the majority or with power due to their race and/or class and recognize that he is also an avies rarres [strange animal]. He feels they have something to say, he also has something to say, he’d like to know how each of them could strengthen each other’s statements.”1 In The Welcoming (2006), Vélez orchestrated a performance at the Liverpool docks with a group of young refugees and asylum seekers from Chinese and African communities, along with Irish migrants, and for MultipleCity (2003), Vélez worked with a brass and marching band known as the Banda del Hogar, which paraded at the “wrong” place and time in Panama City. While Vélez’s performances are often sprawling public affairs, his first project dealing with athleticism, Dreambody (Mister Regenta 2008), appeared much more intimate: a series of male and female bodybuilders performed poses in a mannered ritual on a stage inside the Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain. The extraordinary physiques of the bodybuilders—hairless and oiled, with curvaceous pectorals, flaring thighs and slim waists—were paraded before an art audience traditionally exposed to the sanguine poses of 31 32 C104 Winter 2009 2 Unless otherwise indicated, Humberto Vélez’s words have been taken from an interview with Emelie Chhangur, (December 3, 2009) 3 Doug Akoi quoted in Leslie Haywood’s “Bodymakers: a cultural anatomy of women’s bodybuilding” (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutger’s University Press, 1998), p. 163. 4 Giovanna Miralles, The Last Builder http://www.bienalpanama.org/index1_I. html, 2008. 5 Octavio Paz, “Conjunctions and Disjunctions”(New York: Arcade Publishing, 1985), pp.138-139. top, bottom Humberto Vélez, The Fight, 2007, Tate Modern, London photo: len grant next spread Humberto Vélez, The Welcoming, 2006, Liverpool image © david williams classical nudes rather than the hardened, striated classed and racialized bodies of athletes. Vélez is acutely aware that athletic beauty is a matter of selecting codes, and that some of these codes have meanings that are already beginning to slip. “The body is like gravity, it is like Archimedes, the body is totally present with the audience and ultimately the viewers asked themselves: Do I like it? Do I not like it? What the hell is beauty?”2 Bodybuilding has never failed to catch attention. Its aesthetic—the first appearance of spectacular masculinity in early 20th-century media—comes from two main sources: the strong men from the turn of the 20th century, and the ancient Greek kouroi. The active construction of the body invoked within this muscular mythology offers the kinds of possibilities that magazine advertisements use to appeal to the recreation of self. Vélez makes a coherent case for this promise in his performance embodying the aspirations and dreams of youth in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, but you can take it further. What bodybuilders have done, and continue to do, is flex what defines and delimits beauty. It’s all here: the willing feminization of the male body; the masculinization of the sexed female form; the self-created form constantly worked over and redefined. Bodybuilding is often met with enthusiasm, but also with repulsion, especially female bodybuilders’ appearance. As cultural critic Doug Akoi has persuasively argued, “Mainstream response to the body building body reveals the widespread prejudices and bigotries that found supposedly “individual” decisions about what is feminine or masculine or attractive or unattractive…The challenge that female body building presents to existing and limiting notions of sex and gender…[makes it] a truly revolutionary enterprise.”3 Ironically, in the sporting world itself, bodybuilding is marginalized. Modelled on the skills of 19th-century wrestlers and their heroic muscle display performances, bodybuilding has never been included as an event in the Olympic Games, despite its early status as a “sports extravaganza.” Vélez’s recent film The Last Builder (2008) revives some of the early 20thcentury wonderment of this event, presenting it, if not as a principled discipline, then at least as an allegorical one. Despite having trained at the International School of Cinema, Video, and Television in Cuba, which is renowned for its full-featured productions, Vélez chose to work with black-and-white 8mm film, a medium where the mechanics of illusion can be both coaxed out and concealed. As such, Vélez puts a great deal of attention on what is to become visible, and his work has consistently been preoccupied with establishing the distance of critical reflexivity. The Last Builder is accompanied by a commissioned classically composed soundtrack so one can simply reflect on the body and the aesthetic relations between each movement in one body. In this way, it echoes the opening scenes of Thomas Edison’s Sandow the Modern Hercules (1894), in which light and shadow play on the well-toned limbs and rippling torso of the first builder: strong man Eugene Sandow. Oscillating between stasis and movement, Vélez’s “last builder” produces a succession of frozen, sensual poses that emphasize his body as a record or testament to a classical athletic achievement that reaches back to the ancient Greek valorization of muscularity as evidence of human agency and willpower. Giovanna Miralles’ accompanying text for the Last Builder, presented at the last edition of the Panama Biennial, hints at a possible psychic shell for the last builder: “We called him Jose, for no reason, although his name was Dionisio Herrera Gonzalez; one of the many unexplained things in a life full of secrets. He was seventy years old when he was captured in this film. A pioneer of bodybuilding as a way of life, he had sculpted his body, defying time. Time, on the other hand, had not allowed itself to be completely thwarted, keeping his face for itself.”4 Vélez’s septuagenarian character, worldly-wise and aged, is a role model who can be both admired and rejected, and between this dichotomy plays out our own shifting of generational attitudes towards ageing, when longevity is seen as a social problem, not as a gift. Underlying Vélez’s understanding of beauty is a complicated psychology, perhaps given voice most profoundly by the poet and philosopher Octavio Paz. In questioning how to understand the accelerated state of history, Paz asked, “How can we reach it? How can we touch it? How can we penetrate into its transparent heart? I don’t know. I don’t think anybody does. But perhaps the alliance of poetry and rebellion will give us a glimpse of it.” In the end, he concludes that, “one can be revolutionary and perhaps even change the ideas of beauty in their own time.”5 Like Paz, Vélez seems to suggest that we are surrounded by aged categories, and some of his performances, such as Dreambody and The Last Builder, might well be seen as provocations against the stagnation of the intellect rather than as paeons to a self-fashioned Apollonistic physique. In fact, if Vélez exalts anything, it is provocation and the fruition of finding out for oneself through the doing as well as the pleasure of losing oneself in the possibility of meanings. Despite their “content,” both works suggest that the pleasure of “beauty” and the capacity to momentarily lose sight of the self are paramount. Vélez’s most recent project in the UK, The Fight (2007), presented at the Tate Modern in London, presented a symbiotic relationship between boxers, musicians, dancers and performance. Structured as an aspirational call to the historic 33 34 C105 Spring 2010 35 36 The Beautiful Game... 6 Vélez’s The Fight generated considerable interest including a record number of attendees at the Tate Modern for a performance and a subsequent full photo spread in Parabol magazine accompanied by an article written by writer, curator and magazine editor and creator Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (“the you-as-me” issue, Spring, 2008) C105 Spring 2010 boxing clubs of South London to come fight inside the walls of the iconic Tate Modern led to the participation of one hundred amateur boxers. Not surprisingly, the event attracted a great deal of attention.6 The industrial nature of the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall, a sublime example of the mass societal changes of the early 20th century, was the setting for the performance. This was an ideal setting, as boxing had historically been the preferred way for the British lower working classes, particularly those living in South London, to work out conflict. The five rounds of The Fight was perhaps the most extended action yet of Vélez’s own artistic process and what he describes as “pure art—” elements of boxing orchestrated with music and dance—as a way to “bring people into a difficult subject.” Although The Fight was the most explicitly narrative of any of Vélez’s performances, it is in the frequent asides that the layers of ingenious subplots and subliminal interests revealed themselves. As well as the to-and-fro sparring and competitions between the individual boxers and group training scenes, surprising moments of significance frequently occur. Throughout the documentary film, made specifically for the participants, the preparatory activities for the boxers appear as essential as the boxing matches themselves—just as the process of preparation and realization is as important for Vélez as the finished performance. At the beginning and end of the film, we learn that the performance was marked by a procession to the gallery by land and water accompanied by a Scottish bagpiper and Central African drummers. “I think that it is important to show the different kind of language in art that we have now, that didn’t only come from the Western tradition but especially from other continents, new language traditions that are as valid in this actually very mixed and complex work and complex city that is London,” Vélez said. However, his work does not make any didactic statements about gender, though it is significant that one of the lead characters here is a woman, portrayed not as a victim but as a fighter, and she competes in the same ring as the men. Given that the ring tends to be a traditional male space—and gallery spaces themselves are historically male-centred—it may come as no surprise that the entry of a woman fighter into this space successfully played off the stereotypical notions of who is allowed into the ring, and also into the gallery space itself. If Vélez uses a “different kind of language” as material for making art with boxers, Le contingency, collaboration and communal action. Whatever their political efficacy (and it can be very little), these aesthetics at least could succeed in occupying space in Paris, imprinting themselves on the city. Which is, of course, what art and sport both claim to do. ◆ Elizabeth Matheson would like to acknowledge the contribution of Emelie Chhangur in writing this text. This article is in part based on a conversation between Humberto Vélez and Emelie Chhangur, held during December of 2009. left Humberto Vélez, The Fight, 2007, Tate Modern, London photo: len grant above Humberto Vélez, La Banda de Mi Hogar, a series of public performances included in "ciudadmultiplecity", an international urban art event held in Panama City in 2003. photo: fernando bocanegra Saut (Paris Plunge, 2010), another of Vélez’s collaborations with athletes, will do much the same with swimmers crossing the English Channel. In the midst of collaborating and researching a performance for his upcoming project for the Art Gallery of York University (agyu), Toronto, Vélez was invited to create a performance for Paris’ renowned Pompidou Centre, and the artist has proposed to shake up the staid programs of this modern gallery by presenting a performance on the Seine River. The performers will be teams of young competitive swimmers and divers, water polo players, and synchronized swimmers. The project has also mobilized a group of performers— hip-hop dancers, French slam poets and musicians—from different backgrounds, with an insistence on their common bonds as youth who “swim” against a conservative French society in which the acceptance of the ethnic Other has become contingent on erasing all realities of difference. It is a sophisticated idea, a hybrid oppositional cultural action, bridging over the often less interesting notion of relational aesthetics as a social service for the darker side of Paris’ unemployment, drugs and police violence. However, a project that situates sport at the centre of contemporary debates remains sticky in France. The assumption is that art and sport are often in a Manichaean struggle in cities like Paris: corporate sport built structures and mass mediation versus art’s utopian abolition of different spheres of life. Perhaps, though, such Utopianism goes part and parcel with Vélez’s point. Looking at the performance area on the Seine that will act as the stage for the project, and witnessing the cohesion and consciousness of young divers, swimmers and performers practising together, one is immediately reminded of the earnest aesthetics of sport: the multiplication of perspectives and the embrace of • Elizabeth Matheson's writings have been translated into numerous languages and have appeared in Art Nexus, Ciel Variable, Prefix Photo, and Studium, Brazil's leading electronic arts magazine. As part of her curatorial practice, Elizabeth has worked with and written about renowned Latin American artists including Betsabeé Romero, Rosângela Rennó and Oscar Muńoz, and Academy Award nominee filmmaker Lourdes Portillo. She is currently researching a two-part exhibition on consumption and resurrection in the global age, developing an exhibition on contested spaces, with a forthcoming essay entitled Somoza's Teeth, and is co-curating a project with the artist Humberto Vélez at the agyu. • Emelie Chhangur is a Toronto-based artist, cultural worker, and curator. Maintaining a process-based, collaborative approach to working with artists, her recent curatorial research and practice finds its relevant context in Latin America. As an artist, her position as Assistant Director, Curator at the Art Gallery of York University (agyu) is instrumental in transforming the nature of the contemporary art institution and the social function of the university art gallery in relation to its academic context and the arts community. Her single channel videos have been shown nationally and internationally and her sculpture/installation work was most recently shown in Dyed Roots: The new Emergence of Culture at the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art (mocca), Toronto and upcoming at the Koffler (2010) and Art Gallery of Peterborough (2011). 37