February 4, 2016 – May 29, 2016

Cristobal Leon & Joaquin Cociña: Los Andes

Cristóbal León (b. 1980, Santiago de Chile) and Joaquín Cociña (b. 1980, Concepción, Chile) are an artist collaborative based in Santiago de Chile. Their 2012 film Los Andes was presented as a large-format projection in the Bank of America Project Gallery at PAMM.

Between 2010 and 2013 the artists created a series of dark, stop-motion animation films, Padre.Madre (Mother.Father), El Templo (The Temple), El Arca (The Arc) and Los Andes (The Andes). They describe these mysterious films as foundational chapters of a new creed, presenting magical images that mix the sacred and with the profane, the beautiful with the horrific, the sublime with the bestial. In Los Andes a strange, restless spirit inhabits an office room, moving in and through its walls, producing plant forms, strange alchemical symbols and a giant’s hand and face. The entire film is made using simple materials—found objects, tape, paint and charcoal—to create an enigmatic narrative referencing past colonial empires and futuristic configurations of power and control.

Organization and Support
“Cristóbal León & Joaquín Conciña” is organized by Pérez Art Museum Miami Chief Curator Tobias Ostrander. This exhibition is presented by Bank of America with support provided by Knight Foundation.

Currently
at PAMM

All exhibitions