Today’s TATE Modern visit was about as far away from the apples and pears upstairs – aka Cezanne’s exhibition – as you can get. Hanging the full height of the turbine hall, were two ghostly apparitions. And to be very frank, I felt a bit non+ed.
Think giant Jurassic jellyfish meets Miss Havisham’s wedding dress (in Dickens’ Great expectations) meets spring-look Dementor meets Mudlarker’s bathroom shelf … I know, right? What IS one supposed to think?
The artist, a quietly-spoken, petite lady with long plaits, and the curator were thankfully on hand to demystify. It turned out this wasn’t abstract make-of-it-what-you-like-type art. It was an exercise in symbolism.
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The creamy columns of meticulously knotted natural fibres, interspersed with flotsam and jetsam from the River Thames, represent nothing less than the artist’s entire life’s work and philosophy, which I have tried to decode rather baldly below.
- The hanging-mobile ‘Quipu’ = a tribute to the artistic and poetic traditions of forest peoples of the Amazon
- The pair of Quipu = mother and daughter, cooperation and love, the only way to save the planet
- Natural fibres = the natural world
- The waftiness = the impermanence of all things
- Weaving and knots = the interconnection of all things
- The flotsam = unifying river nature and the industrial space of the old power station, more interconnection
- The column-shape = a tree trunk and, by extension, the world’s forests
- The cream palette = echoes bleached dead trees due to drought
- The bedraggled textile = mourning garb to highlight the artist’s feelings about ecological destruction
- The soundtracks woven into each strand – promoting the interests of endangered indigenous peoples and wildlife.
It makes me wonder, if I was asked to produce an installation expressing my life, values, passions and aspirations, what would it look like…
What would yours look like?
Cecilia Vicuña, @ TATE Modern
11 October 2022-16 April 2023




Artist Cecilia Vicuña at the Tate Modern press conference



