Buried (performance art) explained

Buried
Artist:Abel Azcona
Year:2015
City:Pamplona

Buried is a conceptual and performative work of critical, social and political content by artist Abel Azcona. The performance artwork was created in 2015 through a public and participatory performance, or happening, on the esplanade of Franco's Monument to the Fallen in Pamplona.[1] Azcona invited dozens of relatives of Republicans who were shot, persecuted or disappeared during the Spanish Civil War. Descendants of victims make up the installation in a row in front of the monument, all symbolically buried with soil from the garden of one of the participants, where his relatives had been shot.[2] In 2016 the city of Pamplona invited Azcona to show his work inside the Monument and the project was recreated inside the Monument, which had been converted into an exhibition hall, under the name of Unearthed: A retrospective view on the political and subversive work of the artist Abel Azcona.[3] The exhibition brought together the Buried project and fragments of all of Azcona's works.[4]

In 2016, Azcona coordinated a new performative action, or happening, with relatives of those who were shot in the Pozos de Caudé.[5] Under the name of Desafectos, Azcona formed a wall with the relatives as a complaint, next to the wells outside the city of Teruel,[6] where more than a thousand people had been shot and thrown into the wells over the course of three days during the Civil War.

Bibliography

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Notes and References

  1. News: EFE Agency . Abel Azcona symbolically buries relatives of a shot in a performance . January 15, 2020 . EFE Agency . May 1, 2015.
  2. News: Europa Press . The exhibition of Abel Azcona, the most seen in the old Monument of the Fallen . January 15, 2020 . 20 Minutos . January 18, 2016.
  3. News: Esparza . José Javier . Abel Azcona shows 'Unearthed' . January 15, 2020 . Diario de Navarra . November 20, 2015.
  4. News: Abel Azcona unearths much of his work at the War Memorial. . January 15, 2020 . Navarra News . November 21, 2015.
  5. Web site: Ballester . Irene . Against oblivion and silence. . Makma Visual Art Magazine.
  6. News: Europa Press . Teruel hosts the exhibition 'Where the silences germinate', which reflects on memory and impunity . January 14, 2020 . 20 minutos . May 9, 2016.