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Mariana Castillo Deball: Finding Oneself Outside

01/22/19-05/05/19

The artist’s first museum show in New York brings together a newly commissioned work and recent works never before seen in the US.

Cover Image:

“Mariana Castillo Deball: Finding Oneself Outside,” 2019. Exhibition view: New Museum, New York. Photo: Maris Hutchinson / EPW Studio

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Working in sculpture, printmaking, photography, and installation, Mariana Castillo Deball (b. 1975, Mexico City, Mexico) examines how knowledge and cultural heritage are produced, organized, measured, and authenticated. Her works often take inspiration from Mesoamerican iconography and narratives, considering their early-colonial transformations and their presence in Central America today. Exploring her philosophical interest in time and space as well as cosmology and depictions of natural order, Castillo Deball has engaged a diverse range of scholars in her research. Her works and installations often reflect Surrealist writer Roger Caillois’s notion of “diagonal sciences”—unusual cross-sections of the world that reveal what he called “neglected correlations,” and “tissues of thought.”

The title of Castillo Deball’s New Museum exhibition, “Finding Oneself Outside,” offers a possible description of a sensation that is central to both the study of history and the experience of encountering an unfamiliar culture. The exhibition’s centerpiece, a specially commissioned inlaid wood floor installation, draws from an early colonial map of San Pedro Teozacoalco, Mexico, which bears a unique stylistic blend of European maps and Mixtec codices of the sixteenth century. A large-scale sculpture, No solid form can contain you (2010), offers a peculiar visualization of space as a would-be mold turned inside out—panels cast from a statue of Coatlicue, the Mexica, or Aztec, mother goddess, are inverted to reveal their concave sides and reassembled to create a hollow figure. Do ut des (2014–19), Castillo Deball’s series of perforated books, borrows its title from a Latin phrase meaning “I give so that you will give,” and her Mathematical Distortions (2012) refers to the shifts in knowledge that occur with shifts in position. Together, the works in the exhibition speak to the place of the viewer, the permeability of surfaces, and ideas of reciprocity and exchange.

This exhibition is curated by Natalie Bell, Associate Curator.

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Sponsors

Lead support for this exhibition is provided by the International Leadership Council of the New Museum.

Artist commissions at the New Museum are generously supported by the Neeson / Edlis Artist Commissions Fund.

This exhibition is made possible with support provided by the Toby Devan Lewis Emerging Artists Exhibitions Fund.

Additional support is provided by Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen and Fundación Lumbreras – Colección Adrastus.

We are grateful to the Artemis Council of the New Museum.

Thanks to the Mexican Cultural Institute New York.

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