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Bajo el manto de la selva / Under the Cover of the Jungle

Installation, Public Art, Sculpture

2022, The Brookfield Place New York Annual Arts Commission. Brookfield Place, New York, NY.

Bajo el manto de la selva / Under the Cover of the Jungle was made in collaboration with Fundación San Lorenzo de Barichara papermakers: Yadira Bueno, Serafina Sánchez, Margarita Suárez, Hercilia Velásquez, Aida Janeth Velásquez, Amparo Angarita, Ana Lucila Sánchez, Gloria María Sánchez, Deysi Viviana Viviescas, Julieth Romero, Luz Mery Rivera; and nest weaving by Marcela Carrasco Sua-ty Textil.

Photographs by Heidi Lee and Carey Wagner

Watch the Interview at Brookfield Place

   Growing up, Arocha often journeyed to the Colombian rainforests where she saw Indigenous and Afro-Colombian lands and lifeways caught in the middle of eco- and genocidal forces of the drug trade. She came to the United States as an adult to pursue

Growing up, Arocha often journeyed to the Colombian rainforests where she saw Indigenous and Afro-Colombian lands and lifeways caught in the middle of eco- and genocidal forces of the drug trade. She came to the United States as an adult to pursue a design career, and while she succeeded, she struggled with the limited ethnopolitical identities afforded her as a Colombian American immigrant.

The dizzyingly biodiverse Colombian forest, and the complex social and economic histories that have threatened its existence since the colonists arrived, remain indelibly imprinted in Arocha’s psyche, and emerge in her artistic practice in the form of texturally detailed forest landscapes. Her process starts from botanical field work that includes drawing, rubbing, photographing, preserving, and tracing the bark, seeds, and leaves of the forest. These experiences are further enriched through conversations with Indigenous peoples for whom forests are more than places dense with resources to be extracted. From them, she learned that forests can be sustainably cultivated into spaces for creating eco-systemic, social and spiritual relationships across generations and species.

For Arocha, the process of making the commission for the Winter Garden enabled her to continue both her artistic and ecological education. With a female coop in Barichara, Colombia, she learned how to make paper from fique and pineapple fiber. The paper has been lovingly shaped into the leaves of the Yarumo tree, ferns, and balazos, which have interlocking uses that range from ritual and medicinal purposes to fiber for weaving baskets and bags, and food. Bajo el manto de la selva represents the abundance and intelligence that the forest offers us if we look and listen deeply.

With this work, Arocha invites us to embark on the long journey of challenging the hierarchies of knowledge given to us. Only then might we truly comprehend the immensity of what we would lose if we do not act to protect these complex ecosystems.

Text by Prerana Reddy

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  Bajo el manto de la selva  Hand-made paper, tree branches, cotton canvas, yanchama, fique and wood, 20 x 17 feet.

Bajo el manto de la selva
Hand-made paper, tree branches, cotton canvas, yanchama, fique and wood, 20 x 17 feet.

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Interview and process for “Bajo el manto de la selva”