The 1990s were a decade of euphoria when everything seemed possible; every question had an answer and difficulties would soon find a solution. Globalization was arriving in a Mexico that aspired to economic and social development, and the Federal District – as Mexico City was then known – was the first stop. This globalization brought to the country a wider circulation of information and access to magazines, texts, cinema and music, leading to an explosion of visual culture. The proliferation of cultural activities led to a change in the forms of production and exhibition of works of art.
Over this decade there emerged in Mexico a generation of young and alternative artists who came to transform the art scene in the country, as a decisive response to the Neo-Mexicanism movement that had become entrenched in the art market as well as in state institutions. They all shared a desire to create a different, diverse art in the urban context, and above all in one of the largest and most complex capital cities in the world: Mexico City.
We were happy and we didn’t know it includes pieces from the Jumex Collection and encompasses almost two decades of production, from the mid-1990s to the first ten years of the new millennium. The exhibition brings together works by twenty-eight artists who formed part of the extensive artistic community at that time. Those years were essential for the production of work in Mexico, for the maturing of these artists and their innovative proposals. Several factors combined to shape this epoch in contemporary art, as the historical moment – one among many changes – was fundamental to catalysing this transition. It is no coincidence that the country and, above all, Mexico City, proved attractive to foreign artists who joined this already heterogenous scene. Several continue to live and work in the country, and can no longer be considered foreigners.
To understand the climate in which this revolution in artistic output took place, we must explore five themes that serve as focal points for the exhibition: ‘City’, ‘Space’, ‘Social Context’, ‘Identity’ and ‘Materiality’. These threads help to make sense of the historical and social moment experienced by the artists that led them to produce the works brought together in the show. The endless party of the 1990s gave way to the morning-after of the new millennium. A hangover with a flavour of maturity, in a more globalized context.
We were happy and we didn’t know it presents a journey in homage to the youthful excess that marked artistic creation in the urban context of Mexico City. All stories begin with a situation that lead us to a knot (or conflict) and end with a denouement. The knot began to be tied with the arrival of the new millennium and continues to date. The denouement remains uncertain. In this story, presented in exhibition format, the protagonists decided to change the course of art around them, with their choices shaping art as we know it today. As in every good story, several key figures were left by the wayside, while those who remained took on board the changes and, after a period of continuous unbridled yet unpretentious partying, continue carving out a path towards the international art scene.
In the face of an uncertain future, nostalgia helps us to ascribe meaning to the present and to afford us a sense of belonging. The work of the artists assembled in this exhibition generated an atmosphere in which all were part of one system: that of art. With the passage of time, what remains of these creatives is their works, which serve as testimonies to a period and a moment, even beyond the lasting fame of the artist. ‘Things change. And friends leave. Life doesn’t stop for anyone.’
The DeFe, DeFectuoso, the urban sprawl that goes by the name of Mexico City, has always been a quantitative yardstick for progress, modernity, and the avant-garde for the country as a whole. The capital strives to be closer (or more alike) the ‘First World’ and further away from the ‘Developing’ or, worse, the ‘Third World’. In the 1990s the city was a chaotic and complex place on the point of change, but its arts and culture scene was thriving. With a city centre (in the vicinity of the Zocalo) where people looked for work on a daily basis, with a middle class who enjoyed access to cable television, youth who could watch music videos on MTV, travel to the United States, drink a beer in the park and watch European films (subtitled, naturally) at the Cineteca Nacional. A vast beast that never slept, nicknamed the DeFectuoso – ‘defective’ – and more fondly known as the DeFe – from ‘Distrito Federal’.
The Federal District gave way to Mexico City, a more global, modern, complex and densely populated megalopolis riven by tremendous polarization. In a matter of a few blocks the landscape can change enormously; a bridge can separate a neighbourhood of half-built, improvised homes from a gated community where the houses have finishes in imported marble. The city has always been this way, as eccentric as it is bipolar. A metropolis that constantly provides and that offered a young generation of artists on low budgets materials that they found on the streets, together with countless scenarios that served to trigger the production of works both ephemeral and tangible.
Like in all great cities, space is a complex theme. The clash between public and private space becomes ever more troublesome, while the line separating one from the other becomes blurred or disappears altogether. In the 1990s, both public space and private spaces dedicated to art were few and far between.
The artists who began to develop a different kind of practice clearly did not fit into the public museums nor the few local galleries. In the early nineties, the established artists were finding prominence on the New York art market and in the city’s institutional galleries. Their counterpart was a mixed group of young artists who had lived or spent short periods in the United States and brought back to Mexico a huge thirst to exhibit, to take risks, to use new media and to dare to do all of this outside of institutions and the market. Many of them found spaces in abandoned buildings that had been passed over by the tides of gentrification. Such spaces that emerged in Mexico City included La Quiñonera (1986-), Temístocles 44 (1993-1995), La Panadería (1994-2002), Art Deposit (1996) and the Taller de los viernes (1987-1992), among others.
The ‘alternative’ spaces of the 1990s served as a breeding ground for ideas and attitudes that broke free from the parameters established by cultural and political institutions. Their value doesn’t lie in the generation of finished cultural products or in the promotion of personalities, but in the possibility of exchange among the members of a specific community in the present time.
These projects brought together people from different generations and artistic disciplines. Over this period and until the turn of the century, this flourishing group kept active – in parallel to pursuing their own work – the city’s many independent art spaces. These did not only offer exhibitions but also roundtables, symposiums, colloquiums, concerts – and above all, parties. Night time in the capital saw gatherings of artists, musicians, poets, fans and other hangers-on at these spaces where social conventions were non-existent and unnecessary.
The year 1994 was a watershed for Mexico – an awful year, in short. This was a year that saw the country shattered socially, economically, culturally and educationally.
On January 1, 1994, Mexico embarked on a new era with the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The same day, the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) launched an armed uprising in the state of Chiapas in protest against globalization and neoliberalism. Two assassinations that year defined the political stage. On March 23, the presidential candidate for the PRI party (Institutional Revolutionary Party), Luis Donaldo Colosio, was shot dead in Lomas Taurinas, Tijuana, while the general secretary of the party, José Francisco Ruiz Massieu, was killed on September 28 on Lafragua street in Mexico City. Meanwhile, the economy was tanking. The ‘Tequila Effect’, also known as the ‘December Mistake’, was a financial crisis that led to the devaluation of the Mexican peso (by 300% compared to the US dollar) and triggered months of high inflation, which in turn caused capital shortages for the banking system and significant instability in business activity and the jobs market.
It was against this backdrop and in the aftermath of this annus horribilis that a major and significant transformation in Mexican art took place. Indeed, it is precisely at such moments of great uncertainty that creativity seeks out new paths to find a way through the situation and, as a result, producing testimonies of the epoch. Not all art is – nor should be – political, yet the works produced over this long period of national crisis, which now extends to several decades, form a part of the contemporary history of the country. From the complex and varied perspectives of their artists, the works produced bear witness to our collective successes and failures as a society, interrogating what defines us and what separates us, while pointing to the mistakes we continue to make, as well as the distinctive humour that characterizes us.
Neo-Mexicanism was a decisively pictorial movement, one that focused on the representation of national identity. However, the new generation of creatives had neither the desire nor the intention to follow in their path. Nor did their practice seek the approval of academia or state institutions. It may well be that the feeling was mutual.
Instead, the artists of the 1990s chose to generate their own spaces for creation and exhibition. This was evidence of their search for a creative identity. Many of them took on different roles as artists, creators, cultural managers, or mentors. There was a desire for change, and they embraced it. Part of the process of producing art is connected to the search for personal identity. Whether due to their age (all were in their twenties and thirties), their early proposals reacted against their context, and did not seek the validation of the establishment – rather the contrary. The works produced in this period drew closer to local circumstances in order to speak of a globalized world, as well as being more personal, in order to speak of the collective. Likewise, collaboration took on an important role in contemporary Mexican art. It is more than likely that the seeds for such collaborations were sown well after midnight, over heated discussions about the art produced there and elsewhere, with the resulting decisions being passionately toasted. Without doubt, the sense of camaraderie among artists was key to the identity of the work they produced in the 1990s.
As Silvia Gruner recalls, looking back at this period: ‘It’s absolutely true that we were pretty isolated and left to our own devices in the nineties, so we had fun and did whatever we liked. It was an important moment, when a lot of people came together who had been working together for a long time.’
With the development of a new identity in contemporary art, new materials were required. These reached artists’ hands in different ways: on the one hand, new audio-visual technologies appeared in the country, not only limited to reproduction but also recording and editing thanks to devices that were both easier to operate and more portable; and on the other, increased access to an unprecedented range of printed material and music.
The arrival in Mexico of new materials and supports helped artists to maintain the distance they sought with painting, the medium that the preceding generation had clung to. Similarly, production was kept apart from the vaunted modernity, with a focus on recycling and reuse of many different materials. As a result, works with an ephemeral character and performance pieces were frequent in this period. Finding one’s own voice in this alternative arts scene depended on the choice of materials: soft toys, cardboard, masks, ice, chewing gum and dolls were just some of the non-traditional objects that were ‘elevated’ into artworks. Also popular was the use of found materials, and gestures and actions carried out against the urban backdrop. However, this trend changed again with the arrival of the new millennium. The following decade was characterized by the significant development of new technologies, which brought with it a vast circulation of images and information of all kinds.
Gabriel Kuri Gobelino políptico franja magenta (aeropuerto), 2008 Gobelino políptico franja magenta (Sport City), 2008
Handwoven wall hangings
Gabriel Kuri Gobelino políptico franja magenta (aeropuerto), 2008 Gobelino políptico franja magenta (Sport City), 2008
Handwoven wall hangings
Laureana Toledo Febrero, 2005
Colour video
Iñaki Bonillas La estrella de mar, 2010
Pencil drawing and printed text
Abraham Cruzvillegas Haussmannian Leftovers: Richard Lenoir, 2007
Acrylic paint on found food packaging and cardboard boxes
Damián Ortega Moby Dick performance (model), 2004
Sofía Táboas Jardín portátil, 2001 Plants on a wheeled wooden platform
Santiago Sierra Estorbando en el periférico, 1998
Obstruction of a traffic lane with a cargo container
Chromogenic print
Francis Alÿs Sometimes Making Something Leads to Nothing, 1998
Photographs retouched with Chromalin, typewritten text and pencil
Pablo Vargas Lugo Chispa II, 1999
Perforated paper collage 1 MD-11, 1999
Perforated paper collage
Despegue, 1999
Perforated paper collage
Silvia Gruner Lazy Susan, 2000
Colour video
Dr. Lakra Untitled (group 2), 2006
Illustration on newspaper
Gabriel Orozco Cepillos en el Poste, 1991
Chromogenic print El sillón de mi perro, 1992
Chromogenic print El Muertito, 1993
Chromogenic print
Melanie Smith Spiral City, 2002
Single-channel video projection
Minerva Cuevas Drunker, 1995
Colour video
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Gabriel Kuri works by reflecting on objects that measure human relations with one another, with their environment, and with the markets of exchange. The four wall hangings that comprise his work Gobelino políptico franja magenta (aeropuerto) turn the lens to the waste products of human interactions through the reproduction of till receipts. Manufactured using a traditional weaving style from Guadalajara by a team of weavers, Kuri’s hangings raise questions about consumerism, immediacy and temporality by means of the reinvention of mundane objects that become representative symbols of the interactions that define the culture of consumption.
Laureana Toledo
In the early 2000s, Laureana Toledo was working on a number of photographic works that questioned the concept of inhabiting a space. Her projects generated questions around how spaces are occupied when we disregard architecture and functionality.
This work is a time-lapse of the Presidente Miguel Alemán housing complex located in the south of Mexico City, built between 1947-1949. The architect was Mario Pani, who was strongly influenced by the functionalist model of Le Corbusier.
In the artist’s own words the piece is: ‘A static shot showing a frame into which life enters. People begin to occupy the space and to make it human. Questions arise beyond that of the perfect photo, for example, “where do I hang out the clothes”. When it comes to making a time-lapse, the image of the building and the shadows it creates as the sun goes down are very pretty. But this perfect frame is muddied: living means throwing things away, the things you leave behind you, mess, the space never looks like it does in architectural photography. I was interested in breaking that perfection.’
Iñaki Bonillas
Iñaki Bonillas is an artist who always works with images, yet he is not a photographer. Rather, the artist is an avid collector of images, which he continually reinterprets, reprints, cuts and reappropriates as part of his process. The image that lies at the origin of this work is L’Étoile de mer (The Sea Star) from the surrealist film by Man Ray.
The solarization was accidentally created by the artist Lee Miller in Man Ray’s laboratory. The effect is usually the result of accidentally exposing a plate or film to the light during the developing process. Ray perfected and added effects to the solarization process. Much later, Bonillas joins the list of collaborators on the work (Ray and Miller) and takes as a starting point a still from this film, in which Ray places a crystal in the camera lens, causing the image to no longer be merely cinematographic but more pictorial, thanks to the distortion. On the basis of this still, Bonillas creates a reproduction using some of the solarization techniques employed by Man Ray. Subsequently, the artist invited a draughtsman to reproduce the still images as many as 16 times. By the end of the process the mark that is left resembles – a little – a sea star.
Damián Ortega
The Moby Dick performance is an action which sees the artist attempt to tame the car in a similar manner to Melville’s white whale. The struggle makes reference to the mythologies of man against nature, of the prodigal son and similar narratives of the hero in the context of a contemporary urban hunt. In parallel, the musicians play the legendary drum solo by John Bonham as an accompaniment and aural text. The artist seems to find a historical continuity between his singular vision of contemporary mythology and the search for a cosmic identity to transform it into a manifestation of human culture.
Sofía Táboas
This installation is a purpose-built garden for the space it inhabits. The garden placed on a mobile platform comprises living ornamental plants. The work presents itself as something almost impossible, given the demands of any plant or garden: water and sunlight. Portable Garden moves between artifice and the absurd. This indoor garden is subordinated to human whims, just like the natural world is.
Santiago Sierra
The documentation of the work sets out how the artist acquired permission from a company to borrow the truck-trailer, without concealing the purposes it would be used for. Nor did the driver have any problem when he was asked to block all three lateral lanes of the Periférico ring road in the south of Mexico City for a period of five minutes, causing a major traffic jam and countless insults.
Francis Alÿs
Francis Alÿs is an inescapable reference point for Mexican art, having lived and worked in Mexico for over 30 years. After studying architecture, he moved to Mexico City to support local non-governmental organizations providing support to citizens in the wake of the devastating 1985 earthquake. Disconcerted by the inexplicable idiosyncrasies that he observed about life in the city’s historic centre, he began to carry out absurd actions such as gazing at the sky until people around him began to imitate him, or pushing a large block of ice through the streets until it melted completely. These actions offered a means for Alÿs to explore the streets and neighbourhoods and to reflect on certain sociocultural markers that are prevalent in the metropolis.
Pablo Vargas Lugo
This series of clippings deals with the collision and alteration of diverse iconographic elements, partly derived from aviation, with a great formal diversity and strong sense of humour. The works are characterized by a strange tension between the form (bright and playful) and the content (often dark and traumatic events, from tsunamis to airplane crashes).
Silvia Gruner
‘I produced this piece while I was on a residency in New York. I went into a Chinese restaurant in Chinatown at a time when they weren’t serving food. They were shelling peas. I asked them if they could give me a couple of glasses of water and then with my camera, my tripod and the two glasses of water I began to turn the Lazy Susan on the table. So while they were shelling their mountain of peas (which I’d have loved to film, but I was too embarrassed) I turned the Lazy Susan. One action corresponded to another.
I filmed for about an hour and then I edited the video together with Rafa Ortega and added the song ‘I’ll Never Fall in Love Again’ by Burt Bacharach to it, so the video became this eternal loop with a pop song in the background. It’s funny, because the song is the kind of pop song about falling in and out of love, which is a theme that my work always touches on. It’s a piece that speaks, that has something really crazy about, really wild.’
Dr. Lakra
Jerónimo López Ramírez, better known as Dr. Lakra, creates irreverent and provocative images that transgress the established norms and takes the viewer to the limit between attraction and repulsion. His work is noted for his painted or drawn interventions on posters, erotic magazines and postcards, and expands to include tattoos, mural painting, collage and sculpture. Through these different media, Lakra explores his interest in anthropology and ethnography, which he uses to document his fascination with taboos, fetishes, myths and rituals from different cultures.
Melanie Smith
Spiral City is a film that offers a response to Robert Smithson’s iconic work Spiral Jetty. While in Smithson’s film the camera follows the movement of the artist around the length of the spiral while it is under construction, Spiral City plays with its counterpoint in the grid pattern of Mexico City, working with the ascending movement of the camera that flies in ever-larger spirals. The film is a testimony to a city that is subject to deterioration, with structures built one on top of the other and collapse, as well as being a disturbing cartography of the future. This project is also composed of photographs and paintings that when juxtaposed articulate a document about an apparently unlimited urban expansion, where the abstract contemplation of the mass is inseparable from its social experience.
Minerva Cuevas
The artist recounts in a recent interview: ‘I recorded it at home, well, at my parents’ house. They never knew. I don’t even remember what happened. It was erased from my memory. It lasts 40-something minutes and I fall over… The climax is when I fall over and fall asleep… Then you can see that I get up. I switch off the light, not the camera. I woke up on a chair in a bedroom. The camera carried on recording until the tape ran out.’ This video work, she explains, is really a sculpture, in which her body stands in for the material volume. She sought to change the weight of her body by altering her conscious state. In this way, her movements change, as she becomes unable to stand up, she sways, falls over, gives way. She continues: ‘How do you do something like this? Well, by getting intoxicated. You transform yourself, it was a situation that couldn’t be faked.’
While she drank half a bottle of tequila, the artist wrote different phrases on sheets of paper, like: ‘I drink to remember, I’m not drunk. I drink to forget, I’m not drunk.’ The adjectives used have masculine endings in the Spanish. A drunk woman is judged differently to a drunk man, so the artist wanted to atone for this moral judgment.
Gabriel Orozco
With his photographs, Gabriel Orozco offers a reflection on objects and materials, both organic and inorganic, found or manipulated by the artist. Orozco began to take photographs as a form of visual note-taking and a medium for documenting the ephemeral arrangements of objects encountered in the course of his walks through cities around the world. ‘For me, photography is more than a window; it is more like a space that attempts to capture situations. It serves to take notes. I use the camera like a drawing.’ The artist transforms the ordinary by simply giving a title to an apparently banal image, thereby altering the perception of everydayness offered by the objects he comes across in a haphazard manner.
Abraham Cruzvillegas (1968)
Abraham Cruzvillegas uses the word ‘self-building’ – the process of collaborative construction of improvised homes using recycled or recovered materials – as one of the reference points for his artistic practice. His work has expanded on the term, by employing found objects to produce artworks that transform these basic elements and reflect on the nature of cooperation, exchange, and survival. Haussmannian Leftovers: Richard Lenoir is a mural sculpture comprised of wooden fruit and vegetable crates from the farmers’ market held on Boulevard Richard-Lenoir in Paris. By painting their bottoms black and arranging them in a grid pattern, Cruzvillegas simultaneously alludes to the urban street layout (of Paris as much as Mexico City) and to the language of minimalism.
Horario
Acceso libre sin recorrido guiado (no requieren registro previo)
Lunes a viernes de 10:00h a 15:30h
Sábados y domingos de 10:00 a 12:30h
Acceso con recorrido guiado (con entrada y sin entrada)*
Lunes a viernes de 16:00h a 21:30h
Sábados y domingos de 13:00 a 21:30h
*El acceso es a través de dos filas: una para personas con entrada y otra para personas sin entrada
Cooperativa Sna Jolobil(San Cristobal de las Casas, 1976)
Sna Jolobil es una organización sin fines de lucro indígena fundada en 1976, conformada por cientos de tejedoras de unas 30 comunidades chiapanecas. Su objetivo es revivir técnicas textiles mayas y vender productos para el sustento de las tejedoras y familias en los Altos de Chiapas.
Sus prioridades son preservar técnicas textiles de lenguas Tzotzil, Tzeltal, Chol y Tojolabal, difundir su cultura y respetar la naturaleza al usar materiales naturales y evitar la contaminación. Sna Jolobil ha salvado la indumentaria tradicional y otros objetos de sus comunidades, que de otra manera se habrían perdido. Su impacto económico, toma de decisiones colectivas y gestión productiva la destacan como experiencia representativa entre comunidades indígenas del país. El éxito productivo de esta organización, liderada por mujeres artesanas, inspiró la formación de nuevas cooperativas en otras áreas como el café y la miel.
En 2002, la UNESCO premió su trabajo y en 2017, recibieron el «Community Impact Award» del International Folk Art Market en Santa Fe, Nuevo México.
The year 1994 was a watershed for Mexico – an awful year, in short. This was a year that saw the country shattered socially, economically, culturally and educationally.
On January 1, 1994, Mexico embarked on a new era with the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The same day, the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) launched an armed uprising in the state of Chiapas in protest against globalization and neoliberalism. Two assassinations that year defined the political stage. On March 23, the presidential candidate for the PRI party (Institutional Revolutionary Party), Luis Donaldo Colosio, was shot dead in Lomas Taurinas, Tijuana, while the general secretary of the party, José Francisco Ruiz Massieu, was killed on September 28 on Lafragua street in Mexico City. Meanwhile, the economy was tanking. The ‘Tequila Effect’, also known as the ‘December Mistake’, was a financial crisis that led to the devaluation of the Mexican peso (by 300% compared to the US dollar) and triggered months of high inflation, which in turn caused capital shortages for the banking system and significant instability in business activity and the jobs market.
It was against this backdrop and in the aftermath of this annus horribilis that a major and significant transformation in Mexican art took place. Indeed, it is precisely at such moments of great uncertainty that creativity seeks out new paths to find a way through the situation and, as a result, producing testimonies of the epoch. Not all art is – nor should be – political, yet the works produced over this long period of national crisis, which now extends to several decades, form a part of the contemporary history of the country. From the complex and varied perspectives of their artists, the works produced bear witness to our collective successes and failures as a society, interrogating what defines us and what separates us, while pointing to the mistakes we continue to make, as well as the distinctive humour that characterizes us.