Estancia FEMSA – Casa Luis Barragan, Mexico City

FEMSA Collection | General Francisco Ramírez 12-14
C.P. 11840 Mexico City

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artist / participant

press release

Yto Barrada - Double Skin
June 22–September 8, 2019

Opening: June 22, 12–3pm, Free Admission

Visits by appointment only

Estancia Femsa – Casa Luis Barragán is pleased to present French-Moroccan artist Yto Barrada’s first solo exhibition in Latin America, entitled Double Skin, which brings together a set of newly commissioned works. As the exhibition’s title suggests, Yto Barrada deals with notions of aesthetic ambiguity, which resonate with many aspects of Barragán’s work and life. Double Skin also engages Barragán’s deep interest in magic and enigma, which he understood to be crucial elements of architecture, as well as with his use of the formal and symbolic tension between concepts such as opacity/clarity, desire/restriction, openness/enclosure.

In the studio space of Barragán’s house, Yto Barrada covers the walls with a second skin: a wallpaper from the series Paste Papers (2019). These works are based on designs she found in different books belonging to Luis Barragán, such as: The Grain Silo-Citadels of Morocco; Coatlicue; The Art of Gardens; Max Ernst; Spanish Andalucia and Parables and Evangelical Allegories, among others. The practice of decorating book covers and endpapers with paste paper designs dates back to as early as the seventeenth century. Originally used by bookbinders, paste paper also began to be applied to line drawers in modest homes. Barrada amplifies this discrete function in her piece by transforming the paste paper into an exterior ornament for the studio walls, thus bringing intimacy into full view. This transposition gesture acts as a rich metaphor for the many ambiguities implicit in Barragán’s life and work.

Dispersed throughout the rooms of the house we also find five chromatic collages, the Practice Pieces (Color Charts) (2019), made with hand-dyed silk velvets. Inspired by dyers and the color sampling systems used in textile conservation, these pieces are inscribed within Yto Barrada’s long-standing interest in educational materials, platforms, and structures. Both Mexico and Morocco boast long respective histories of natural dye production with organic materials such as cochineal, indigo, and Tyrian purple.

Lastly, in the library of the house we find the short film Horsehair, Confetti, and Rice (2019), projected directly onto a yellow monochrome made in Barragán’s architecture studio. The film is a piece of experimental cinema, with a strong emphasis on materials and textures, where a wealth of colors and shapes unravel. The hallucinatory quality of the film also alludes to historical artistic imaginaries that stem from both Mexico and Morocco. As such, the exhibition pays homage to the strong influence of Morocco’s vernacular architecture—and the country’s material culture in general—on Barragán and his friend and notable collaborator Mathias Goeritz’s architectural oeuvres. Furthermore, Double Skin is framed within Barrada’s long engagement with architecture and the history of modernism through multiple past projects.