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Presa House presents Verónica Gaona: "In Search of a Better Death" opening reception

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Photo courtesy of Verónica Gaona

Presa House Gallery will present a solo exhibition by Houston-based artist, Verónica Gaona.

Gaona is an interdisciplinary artist working across the Texas-México border landscapes. Informed by her transnational identity and the sociopolitical climate, Gaona creates an ongoing dialogue between her own body and the land to investigate notions of architecture, migration, and death. As a first-generation Mexican American from a family of migrants who have frequently relocated to search for employment, Gaona investigates migrants’ decision to live and work in the North, their building aspirations in the homeland, and end-of-life planning.

By considering the voices of displaced and exploited communities, Gaona materializes characteristics of diaspora such as transnationality and impermanence to redress traditional approaches to memorialization. Her artwork exists at the intersection of digital media, sculpture, and installation, and it brings to the foreground labor and spatial issues at play. Working from the border, Gaona uses her position, as an insider and outsider, as a tool to bring migrant spaces to life and center them within the broader debates on migration.

"In Search of a Better Death," considers the migrant worker, asylum seeker, and border dweller to draw attention to the consequences of displacement brought by inadequate infrastructure and immigration policies across the U.S. – Mexico landscapes. By examining the notion of land, the exhibition focuses on family units dispersed across geographies in life where they can also reunite in death. By materializing burial rituals in the homeland and flower arrangements at gravesites, the artworks bring closure to a lifetime of uncertainty and at the same time represent the longing and attachment to the ancestral land. Through digital media, sculpture, installation, and performance, the exhibition grapples with the question, "where do migrants rest after a lifetime of movement?"

Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through March 26.

Presa House Gallery will present a solo exhibition by Houston-based artist, Verónica Gaona.

Gaona is an interdisciplinary artist working across the Texas-México border landscapes. Informed by her transnational identity and the sociopolitical climate, Gaona creates an ongoing dialogue between her own body and the land to investigate notions of architecture, migration, and death. As a first-generation Mexican American from a family of migrants who have frequently relocated to search for employment, Gaona investigates migrants’ decision to live and work in the North, their building aspirations in the homeland, and end-of-life planning.

By considering the voices of displaced and exploited communities, Gaona materializes characteristics of diaspora such as transnationality and impermanence to redress traditional approaches to memorialization. Her artwork exists at the intersection of digital media, sculpture, and installation, and it brings to the foreground labor and spatial issues at play. Working from the border, Gaona uses her position, as an insider and outsider, as a tool to bring migrant spaces to life and center them within the broader debates on migration.

"In Search of a Better Death," considers the migrant worker, asylum seeker, and border dweller to draw attention to the consequences of displacement brought by inadequate infrastructure and immigration policies across the U.S. – Mexico landscapes. By examining the notion of land, the exhibition focuses on family units dispersed across geographies in life where they can also reunite in death. By materializing burial rituals in the homeland and flower arrangements at gravesites, the artworks bring closure to a lifetime of uncertainty and at the same time represent the longing and attachment to the ancestral land. Through digital media, sculpture, installation, and performance, the exhibition grapples with the question, "where do migrants rest after a lifetime of movement?"

Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through March 26.

Presa House Gallery will present a solo exhibition by Houston-based artist, Verónica Gaona.

Gaona is an interdisciplinary artist working across the Texas-México border landscapes. Informed by her transnational identity and the sociopolitical climate, Gaona creates an ongoing dialogue between her own body and the land to investigate notions of architecture, migration, and death. As a first-generation Mexican American from a family of migrants who have frequently relocated to search for employment, Gaona investigates migrants’ decision to live and work in the North, their building aspirations in the homeland, and end-of-life planning.

By considering the voices of displaced and exploited communities, Gaona materializes characteristics of diaspora such as transnationality and impermanence to redress traditional approaches to memorialization. Her artwork exists at the intersection of digital media, sculpture, and installation, and it brings to the foreground labor and spatial issues at play. Working from the border, Gaona uses her position, as an insider and outsider, as a tool to bring migrant spaces to life and center them within the broader debates on migration.

"In Search of a Better Death," considers the migrant worker, asylum seeker, and border dweller to draw attention to the consequences of displacement brought by inadequate infrastructure and immigration policies across the U.S. – Mexico landscapes. By examining the notion of land, the exhibition focuses on family units dispersed across geographies in life where they can also reunite in death. By materializing burial rituals in the homeland and flower arrangements at gravesites, the artworks bring closure to a lifetime of uncertainty and at the same time represent the longing and attachment to the ancestral land. Through digital media, sculpture, installation, and performance, the exhibition grapples with the question, "where do migrants rest after a lifetime of movement?"

Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through March 26.

WHEN

WHERE

Presa House Gallery
725 S. Presa St.
San Antonio, TX 78210
https://presahouse.com/portfolio/march-2022/

TICKET INFO

Admission is free.
All events are subject to change due to weather or other concerns. Please check with the venue or organization to ensure an event is taking place as scheduled.
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