The Gestures of Work. Chapter 2

Opening: Friday September 15th 9pm Accounts of societal life and customs, as we know them, rely primarily on the observation of objects, be they cultural products, tools, or utensils. From a knife or a shovel to industrial techniques and automated machinery, our gaze overlooks movements, postures and actions performed upon these objects. Based on gestures, this exhibition focuses on the movements of labour and looks at bodies through the strength of the arms, the posture of the back and the bending of the legs. These works critically examine the relationship between bodies, work, and technologies in contemporary societies. They shed light on diverse bonds of work, ranging from the neoliberal bureaucratic overproduction of the financial world to precarious rural and industrial labour. In this regard, the itinerary shows the corporeal dimension in the contemporary work patterns of home office and entrepreneurship - euphemisms that reveal new links and gestures in a context of deregulation of the working day, a feature of post-industrial capitalism. From a historical and political perspective, these works also present gestures without objects. Tools disappear and the emphasis lies on bodily movements that have become obsolete or have been drastically transformed into other forms of work due to industrial and agricultural technification. Antonio della Guardia and Cristina Galán's projects are permeated by the degradations of a 24/7 society based on permanent connectivity and the relentless production of content. Their impact on contemporary subjectivities can be seen in the bodies presented in the works of both artists. Body postures and gestures become malleable objects and actions, whose humorous anomalies are imbued with resistance. Similarly, Sofia Caesar and Ana Gallardo focus on the progressive blurring of the boundaries between work and leisure space. The diversity of jobs included in Ana Gallardo's CV, barely related to her artistic work, serves as a reminder of the instability and precariousness inherent to labour relations in post-Fordist society. In contrast to these dystopian imaginaries appropriated by the omnipresence of labour, Neli Ružić portrays the nostalgic gestures repeated by Ana, a former Croatian textile factory worker. The Dalmatinka factory in Sinj, one of the main production centres of the former Yugoslavia, closed down in the 1990s to become a venue for receptions and events. Ružić pays homage to work, a fundamental tool of women's emancipation in socialist regimes, whose dissolution in the context of liberal democracy is evident in the traditionalist regression of gender mandates. Clarisa Appendino and Benedetta Casini


Imagen: Sofia Caesar, Sitting (Derrame), 2022


Km: 171

Venue: Espacio Cultural San José

Address : 18 de Julio 509 esq. Treinta y Tres

City : San José

Uruguay

Artist(s):

Ana Gallardo (ARG)

Sofia Caesar (BRA)

Antonio Della Guardia (ITA)

Cristina Galán (ESP)

Neli Ružić (HRV)

Curatorship:

Benedetta Casini (ITA), Clarisa Appendino (ARG),

Type(s):

Exhibition

From 2023/09/15

To 2023/10/17