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	<title>Haudenschildgarage &#187; Ricardo Piglia</title>
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		<title>SPARE PARTS: A Cycle of Projects by Eloisa Haudenschild &amp; Steve Fagin</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1611/spare-parts-a-cycle-of-projects-by-eloisa-haudenschild-steve-fagin.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1611/spare-parts-a-cycle-of-projects-by-eloisa-haudenschild-steve-fagin.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Mar 2010 12:33:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Garage Projects]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alejandro Ruiz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alessandro Petti]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Decolonizing Architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eyal Weizman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mian Mian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandi Hilal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steve Fagin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Last Book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[2006 – 2009

Spare Parts is 3-year cycle of projects that encourages the juxtaposition of the crucial, the trivial, and the arcane

<em>Decolonizing Architecture</em> - Palestine
<em>A Crime Has Many Stories</em> - Argentina
<em>The Last Book</em> - United States
]]></description>
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<h5>The <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, Spare Parts Projects</h5>
<p>hG, Spare Parts is a 3-year cycle of projects commissioned and produced by Director <strong>Eloisa Haudenschild</strong> and Commissioning Editor <strong>Steve Fagin</strong> from 2006 &#8211; 2009 that encouraged the juxtaposition of the crucial, the trivial, and the arcane.  The projects included <em>Decolonizing Architecture</em>, selected for the 2009 Architectural Venice Biennale, <em>A Crime has Many Stories</em> that premiered at MALBA in Buenos Aires in November 2008 and <em>The Last Book</em> which launched in April 2009 at the MAK Center, Schindler House in Los Angeles.</p>
<h5><em>Decolonizing Architecture</em></h5>
<p>Selected by ARTFORUM in January of 2010 as one of the top ten projects of the decade, <strong>Decolonizing Architecture</strong> was originally conceptualized and its pilot stage produced in dialogue with <strong>Eloisa Haudenschild</strong> and <strong>Steve Fagin</strong>, partners in the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, Spare Parts projects.</p>
<p>Decolonizing Architecture is a collaboration between the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> and London-based architect and theorist <strong>Eyal Weizman</strong> and Bethlehem-based architects <strong>Sandi Hilal</strong> and <strong>Alessandro Petti</strong>. Decolonizing Architecture is a multi-pronged project that addresses the possibilities of understanding and redesigning Palestine in preparation for a post-evacuation time and context through two case studies, the former military base, Oush Grab, and the settlement of P&#8217;sagot.  A scale model, architectural plans and public events, including an exhibition and symposium with Eloisa Haudenschild, Steve Fagin, Sandi Hilal, Eyal Weizman, Alessandro Petti and Lieven de Cauter at the Bozar Center for Fine Art in Brussels (10/31 &#8211; 1/4/09), were produced around plans for turning the fabric of the case studies into Palestinian public institutions.</p>
<p>The Manual of Decolonization is the result of a residency that Salottobuono (<a href="www.salottobuono.net" target="_blank">www.salottobuono.net</a>) made in August 2008 in Beit Sahour (Bethlehem) at Decolonizing Architecture. The manual is a choral work where different approaches stood out at the same time. The production of the manual was supported by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> and based upon a series of meetings with the “stakeholders” in this process. It includes representatives of various organizations and individuals, the local community, members of various NGOs, government and municipal bodies, academic and cultural institutions, local residents and resident associations.<a href=" http://www.salottobuono.net/projects/manualofdecolonization.shtml" target="_blank"> Click here to view the manual.</a></p>
<p>The manual and scale model will be on view in Los Angeles at SUPERFRONT as part of the exhibtion <em>UNPLANNED: Research and Experiments at the Urban Scale</em> (3/25/10 &#8211; 7/2/10).</p>
<p>In 2009, the project was presented at the Venice Biennale and in 2008 it was selected for the 11th International Architecture Exhibition at the Venice Biennale.  Decolonizing Architecture has also been exhibited at COAC in Barcelona (2009) and at the 4th International Architecture Biennale in Rotterdam (2009-2010).</p>
<p><a href="http://www.decolonizing.ps/site/" target="_blank">Click here to visit the Decolonizing Architecture website. </a></p>
<h5>A Crime Has Many Stories</h5>
<p><strong>A Crime Has Many Stories,</strong> is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by <strong>Eloisa Haudenschild </strong>and <strong>Steve Fagin</strong> of the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Argentine writer Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story, <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (<em>Madwoman and the Story of a Crime</em>, 1975) set in Buenos Aires and plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  Piglia&#8217;s text generated two site-specific pieces and a commissioned story by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.</p>
<p>In May of 2008, the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> traveled to Buenos Aires to meet with its advisory curatorial committee.  Argentine curator Sonia Becce and Argentine artist Judi Werthein selected a short list of artists for the project, working in installation, photo and video.  From this short list, Eloisa Haudenschild, Steve Fagin, and Alejandro Ruiz selected artists <strong>Roberto Jacoby, Fernanda Laguna</strong> and <strong>Rosalba Mirabella </strong>for the two site-specific pieces. <strong>Monica Jovanovich </strong>coordinated the project in San Diego and Buenos Aires.</p>
<p>On November 29, 2008 a multidisciplinary, one-day extravaganza organized by Argentine producer Alejandro Ruiz began with a video of Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s elegant interpretation of his own text performed especially for our event and premiered at Malba &#8211; Fundación Costantini (Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires). We traveled from the opening of the project at Malba &#8211; Fundación Costantini to the closing celebration in La Boca by way of the projects by Jacoby, Laguna and Mirabella in a movable feast of culture and repast. The climax of our extravaganza was the inaugural performance of Washington Cucurto&#8217;s savagely brilliant short story, <em>El Hijo</em>, commissioned by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> in response to Piglia’s <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em>. Cucurto and the literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> performed an ensemble reading of the story in La Boca. A catalog of the entire project and a limited edition Survival Kit was provided to the participants at Malba to facilitate their journey. Both were produced in collaboration with Eloisa Cartonera.</p>
<h5>The Last Book</h5>
<p>For this project, the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, Spare Parts produced an homage to “the book” in the age of the conquest of the Kindle.  <strong>Steve Fagin</strong> wished to resuscitate the magnificence of the illuminated manuscript as the world turned toward darkness.  Perhaps electronic technology could be used, not to leave the book on the dustbin of history, but to reconstitute a forgotten past where words and images danced in each other’s arms.</p>
<p>To this end the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> constructed a one of a kind book that included text, drawings, moving images and sounds.  Its construction in the medieval, supersized tradition consisted of three illuminated folios each eighteen and a half inches high, thirteen inches wide and three inches deep.</p>
<p>To make this more than a dirge for the dead, a proper Joycian Wake, we incorporated into our project the live and kicking writing skills of <strong>Mary Gaitskill</strong> (<em>Two Girls Fat and Thin</em>), the macabre visual lyricism of <strong>Leslie Thornton</strong> (<em>Peggy and Fred in Hell</em>) and YouTube, the MySpace-with-a-twist drawings of <strong>Davina Semo</strong>, the retro-futurist music mix of <strong>Greg Landau</strong>, and as the piece de resistance, Shanghai’s notorious and ever so talented bad girl author <strong>Mian Mian</strong> as one of our readers with <strong>Monica Jovanovich</strong> and the <strong>Kindle</strong>.  This bouillabaisse was concocted by Steve Fagin. On April 26, 2009 The Last Book was performed at the Schindler House, MAK Center for Art and Architecture, Los Angeles.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Spare Parts: A Crime Has Many Stories in Buenos Aires</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3559/spare-parts-a-crime-has-many-stories-in-buenos-aires.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3559/spare-parts-a-crime-has-many-stories-in-buenos-aires.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jan 2010 00:15:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Garage Projects]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MALBA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steve Fagin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teddy Cruz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[May 2008 selection of artists Buenos Aires, Argentina

November 29, 2008 traverse of Buenos Aires

A multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city based on Argentine writer Ricardo Piglia's short story, <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen </em>(1975).
]]></description>
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<h5>A Crime Has Many Stories (English)</h5>
<p><em>The shortest distance between two points is never a straight line</em></p>
<p><strong>November 29 2008, Buenos Aires, Argentina</strong></p>
<p>A Crime Has Many Stories, is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by <strong>Eloisa Haudenschild </strong>and <strong>Steve Fagin</strong> of the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Argentine writer Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story, <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (<em>Madwoman and the Story of a Crime</em>, 1975) set in Buenos Aires and plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  Piglia&#8217;s text generated two site-specific pieces and a commissioned story by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.</p>
<p>In May of 2008, the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> traveled to Buenos Aires to meet with its advisory curatorial committee.  Argentine curator Sonia Becce and Argentine artist Judi Werthein selected a short list of artists for the project, working in installation, photo and video.  From this short list, Eloisa Haudenschild, Steve Fagin, and Alejandro Ruiz selected artists <strong>Roberto Jacoby, Fernanda Laguna</strong> and <strong>Rosalba Mirabella </strong>for the two site-specific pieces. <strong>Monica Jovanovich </strong>coordinated the project in San Diego and Buenos Aires.</p>
<p>On November 29, 2008 a multidisciplinary, one-day extravaganza organized by Argentine producer Alejandro Ruiz began with a video of Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s elegant interpretation of his own text performed especially for our event and premiered at Malba &#8211; Fundación Costantini (Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires). We traveled from the opening of the project at Malba &#8211; Fundación Costantini to the closing celebration in La Boca by way of the projects by Jacoby, Laguna and Mirabella in a movable feast of culture and repast. The climax of our extravaganza was the inaugural performance of Washington Cucurto&#8217;s savagely brilliant short story, <em>El Hijo</em>, commissioned by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> in response to Piglia’s <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em>. Cucurto and the literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> performed an ensemble reading of the story in La Boca. A catalog of the entire project and a limited edition Survival Kit was provided to the participants at Malba to facilitate their journey. Both were produced in collaboration with Eloisa Cartonera.</p>
<p>The goal of this project was to generate a dynamic event that worked across literature, art and the city. Our hope, by joining artists from the 60s with young artists of the present and crossing the boundary of literature and fine art, was to &#8220;perform&#8221; the continuity and range of Argentine cultures at its strongest.  We feel that the role of South America and Argentina in general has been greatly underestimated on the world stage and we hope this event, in its modest way, will support the growing awareness of the quality and specificity of Argentina&#8217;s historical and current contributions to world culture.</p>
<p>This project is dedicated to the wisdom, energy and spirit of generous debate that Olivier Debroise (1952-2008) provided us in regard to Latin American culture. With our project, we wish to continue that path.</p>
<p>*On October 2009 the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> invited <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong> and <strong>Maria Gomez</strong> of Eloisa Cartonera for a residency at the Garage and a Garage Talk on October 15th. From October 16 &#8211; 18, 2008 Washington Cucurto and Maria Gomez traveled to Tijuana to present a lecture and a two-day workshop in conjunction with the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, inSite, Nortestacion, Epicentrico and the Escuela de Artes de la Universidad Autonoma de Baja California.</p>
<a href="javascript:;" class="hackadelic-sliderButton"onclick="toggleSlider('#hackadelic-sliderPanel-1')" title="click to expand/collapse slider Click Here To View The Schedule">Click Here To View The Schedule&raquo;</a> <span class="hackadelic-sliderPanel concealed" id="hackadelic-sliderPanel-1"></span>
<div id="hackadelic-sliderNote-1" class="concealed"><p><br />
<strong>4pm – 5:30pm,  Malba &#8211; Fundación Costantini Av. Figueroa Alcorta 3045, Palermo</strong><br />
Video of author Ricardo Piglia reading his story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975) in the auditorium. <a href="http://www.malba.org.ar/web/t1registro.php?id=812" target="_blank">Click here to visit Malba&#8217;s website.</a></p>
<p><strong>6pm &#8211; 7pm, Tucuman 3754 between Salguero and Bulnes, Palermo</strong><br />
Artist Rosalba Mirabella was thinking, writing and drawing a crime during her two month voluntary incarceration in a room in Buenos Aires.<br />
<em>(This project was destroyed by fire and had to be re-conceptualized and installed at the Centro de Investigaciones Artisticas)</em></p>
<p><strong>7:30pm – 8:30pm, Museo de Calcos y Escultura Comparada &#8220;Ernesto de la Carcova&#8221;, Puerto Madero</strong><br />
Copies end up having real results with Fernanda Laguna and Roberto Jacoby’s project. Through the dexterity of a series of objets d&#8217;art being bequeathed, the passage of the seeming same leads to a world of difference.</p>
<p><strong>9pm – 12am, Eloisa Cartonera, Brandsen 647, La Boca</strong><br />
Newly commissioned crime story, <em>El Hijo</em>, by author Washington Cucurto, written in response to Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story, was performed by the collective at Eloisa Cartonera’s La Boca workshop followed by the closing celebration.</p></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>supported program: C.I.A.</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3631/supported-program-c-i-a.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3631/supported-program-c-i-a.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Jan 2010 21:36:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steve Fagin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teddy Cruz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[January – December, 2010

El Centro de Investigaciones Artísticas, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Art and theory courses / seminar programs
]]></description>
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<p>The <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> supports <strong>el Centro de Investigaciones Artísticas&#8217;</strong> 2010 art and theory courses and seminar program.</p>
<p>Art and theory course participants included Ana Longoni (March, 2010), Victoria Noorthoorn (March, 2010), and José Fernández Vega (March 2010).</p>
<p>Seminar participants include <strong>Steve Fagin</strong>, m7red (March, 2010), Ricardo Piglia (April, 2010), Washington Cucurto, María Moreno (April 2010), Rosario Bléfari, Andrea Giunta (May, 2010), Pablo Gianera and Pablo Fessel, Daniel Link, Doris Sommer (April, 2010) and José Falconi.</p>
<p>Workshop participants include Vasco Araujo (March, 2010), Yoshua Okon (April, 2010), and Mike Smith (May, 2010).</p>
<p>Past 2009 program participants included Tania Bruguera, Germán García, Josep-María Martín, Sergio Vega, Paul Ramirez Jonas, Lucio Castro, Claire Bishop, Teddy Cruz, Roberto Amigo, Alejandro Ros, Ernesto Ballesteros, Reinaldo Laddaga, Tulio de Sagastizabal, and Gonzalo Aguilar.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ciacentro.org/node/803" target="_blank">Click here for more information on el Centro&#8217;s programs.</a></p>
<p><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/convocatoria-2010_flyer22.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-4236" title="convocatoria-2010_flyer22" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/convocatoria-2010_flyer22.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="1118" /></a></p>
<h5>About el Centro de Investigaciones Artísticas</h5>
<p>El Centro de Investigaciones Artísticas (Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a physical and virtual space of interaction and debate for artists and thinkers from around the world, particularly those in Latin America and Spain. The purpose of el Centro is to provide critical tools for the formation and development of the artistic community in order to intervene in the constantly redefined cultural map of the moment. The work of el Centro goes beyond the frontiers of genres and disciplines, with an emphasis on those that expand the borders of practice, genre and media; those that propose new ways of production, of exhibition and exchange; those that explore broader social contexts than the institutionalized one. Writers, musicians, philosophers, architects, designers, film-makers, historians, psychoanalysts, technologists, performers, photographers, visual artists, and theatrical artists, among many others, will converge at el Centro. The activities will have a strong pedagogical component based on historic research and art theory conducted virtually and physically.</p>
<p>El Centro de Investigaciones Artísticas, founded by Graciela Hasper, Roberto Jacoby and Judi Werthein, is a non-profit organization under the legal umbrella of the Start Foundation. In the begining of 2006, during the International Residence for Argentine Artists (RIAA), these three artists engaged in an exhaustive discussion on art education. Since then, they investigated a number of teaching models and possible education environments. It took three years to analyze and find the means to realize a project that would establish a dialogue that could go beyond disciplinary and geographical frontiers. By the middle of 2009, CIA&#8217;s infrastructure and project launch plans were in place. The development and continuity of this project depends on the engagement of artists, scholars, cultural private and public institutions and enterprises, as well as philanthropic organizations and individuals</p>
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		<title>garage talk: Eloisa Cartonera &amp; Washington Cucurto</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3668/garage-talk-eloisa-cartonera-washington-cucurto.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3668/garage-talk-eloisa-cartonera-washington-cucurto.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Oct 2009 19:42:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jennifer Flores Sternad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Monica Jovanovich]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steve Fagin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teddy Cruz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[October 15, 2009 at <em>h</em><strong>G</strong>

Reading and conversation

Washington Cucurto and Maria Gomez with Teddy Cruz, Juli Carson, Steve Fagin, Eloisa Haudenschild, Jennifer Flores-Sternad, and Monica Jovanovich-Kelley
]]></description>
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<p>On October 15, 2009 a Garage Talk was held presenting <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong> and <strong>Maria Gomez</strong> of the Argentine literary collective<strong> Eloisa Cartonera</strong> in conversation with <strong>Steve Fagin, Eloisa Haudenschild, Teddy Cruz</strong> (architect, estudio teddy cruz), <strong>Juli Carson </strong>(Director, UCI Art Gallery) <strong>Jennifer Flores-Sternad</strong> (art critic and curator), and <strong>Monica Jovanovich</strong>.  Steve Fagin and Juli Carson were moderators and respondents.  All of the October 15 participants were part of the November 2008 <em>A Crime Has Many Stories</em> traverse in Buenos Aires. At the Garage Talk, Cucurto read an excerpt from <em>El Hijo</em>.</p>
<p><em>A Crime Has Many Stories</em>, is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by <strong>Eloisa Haudenschild </strong>and <strong>Steve Fagin</strong> of the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Argentine writer Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story, <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (<em>Madwoman and the Story of a Crime</em>, 1975) set in Buenos Aires and plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  Piglia&#8217;s text generated two site-specific pieces and a commissioned story by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto, </strong><em>El Hijo. </em>In May of 2008, the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> traveled to Buenos Aires to meet with its advisory curatorial committee.  Argentine curator Sonia Becce and Argentine artist Judi Werthein selected a short list of artists for the project, working in installation, photo and video.  From this short list, Eloisa Haudenschild, Steve Fagin, and Alejandro Ruiz selected artists <strong>Roberto Jacoby, Fernanda Laguna</strong> and <strong>Rosalba Mirabella </strong>for the two site-specific pieces. <strong>Monica Jovanovich </strong>coordinated the project in San Diego and Buenos Aires.</p>
<p>On November 29, 2008 a multidisciplinary, one-day extravaganza organized by Argentine producer Alejandro Ruiz began with a video of Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s elegant interpretation of his own text performed especially for our event and premiered at Malba &#8211; Fundación Costantini (Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires). A catalog of the entire project and a limited edition Survival Kit was provided to the participants at Malba to facilitate their journey. Both were produced in collaboration with Eloisa Cartonera.</p>
<p>From October 14 &#8211; 16, 2009 Cucurto and Gomez were Artists-In-Residence at the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>. From October 16 &#8211; 18, 2008 Cucurto and Gomez traveled to Tijuana to present a lecture and a two-day workshop in conjunction with the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, inSite, Nortestacion, Epicentrico and the Escuela de Artes de la Universidad Autonoma de Baja California.</p>
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<h5>About the Participants</h5>
<h5>Eloisa Cartonera</h5>
<p>Eloísa Cartonera is a social and community-related artistic project in Buenos Aries, Argentina. The central office is a cardboard store – a place where cardboard and paper is sold – named “No hay cuchillo sin Rosas” (“There’s no knife without Roses”). There, cardboard collectors, cartoneros, exchange ideas with artists and writers. The cardboard collector is a South American phenomenon and many times there are entire families working as cartoneros.   Eloísa Cartonera invents its own aesthetic; open minded and unbiased, wishing to produce reciprocal learning, fueled by creativity. Books with cardboard covers are edited on the street; these covers, painted by hand with temperas and paintbrush, are made of the cardboard that was collected in the streets.  Eloisa Cartonera publishes unknown, border and vanguard texts of Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Costa Rica, Uruguay, Brazil and Peru. They have a roster of world-renowned authors including Ricardo Piglia, Cesar Aira, Gonzalo Milan (Chile), and Luis Chavez (Costa Rica).<br />
<a href="http://www.eloisacartonera.com.ar/" target="_blank"> Click here to visit their website.</a></p>
<h5>Jennifer Flores-Sternad</h5>
<p>Jennifer Flores Sternad is a critic, curator, and researcher whose work focuses on militant and public art practices, performance, and art making as a mode of research. She has done extensive research in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico with fellowships and grants from Harvard University and UCLA. She was the South American Coordinator for the international public art project The School of Panamerican Unrest and the organizer and producer of <em>Público Transitorio</em>, a traveling event series in L.A. that featured artists from throughout the Americas. Jennifer is currently a research fellow at LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), where she is organizing an exhibition and publication on performance art in Southern California in the 1970s.</p>
<h5>Juli Carson</h5>
<p>Juli Carson is Associate Professor in the Studio Art Department at UCI where she teaches Critical and Curatorial practice in Contemporary Art and directs the University Art Gallery. She was curator of <em>Exile of the Imaginary: Politics, Aesthetics, Love </em>(Vienna: Generali Foundation, 2007). She also curated the archival exhibition accompanying <em>Mary Kelly’s Post-Partum Document</em> (Vienna: Generali Foundation, 1998).  Her essays on conceptualism and psychoanalysis have been published in <em>Art Journal, Documents, October,</em> <em>Texte Zur Kunst</em> and <em>X-Tra, </em>as well as in numerous critical anthologies.  She is currently completing her forthcoming book, <em>The Conceptual Unconscious: A Poetics of Critique.</em></p>
<h5>Teddy Cruz</h5>
<p>Teddy Cruz was born in Guatemala City. He obtained a Master in Design Studies at Harvard University in 1997 and established his research-based architecture practice in San Diego, California in 2000. He has been recognized internationally for his urban research of the Tijuana-San Diego border, and in collaboration with community-based nonprofit   organizations such as Casa Familiar, for his work on affordable   housing in relationship to an urban policy more inclusive of social   and cultural programs for the city. In 1991 he received the   prestigious Rome Prize in Architecture and in 2005 he was the first   recipient of the James Stirling Memorial Lecture On The City Prize,   by the Canadian Center of Architecture and the London School of Economics. In 2008 he was selected to represent the US in the Venice   Architecture Biennial and he is currently a Professor in public culture and urbanism in the Visual Arts Department at University of California, San Diego.</p>
<h5>Washington Cucurto</h5>
<p>Born Santiago Vega, 1973, Quilmes, Buenos Aires, Argentina, he is better known as Washington Cucurto &#8211; Argentine writer, poet, narrator and editor and one of the founders and directors of Eloisa Cartonera, a publishing house that disseminates contemporary Latin American literature. The central office is a place where cardboard and paper is sold. There, cardboard collectors, cartoneros, exchange ideas with artists and writers. Eloisa Cartonera invents its own aesthetic; open minded and unbiased, wishing to produce reciprocal learning, fueled by creativity. Books with cardboard covers are edited on the street; these covers, painted by hand, are made of the cardboard collected in the streets. Eloisa Cartonera publishes world-renowned, unknown, border and vanguard texts of Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Costa Rica, Uruguay, Brazil and Peru.</p>
<p>With the publication of Cucurto’s first book of poetry, Zelarayán (1998), he burst forth on to the South American cultural scene creating, along with other poets, the style today known as Realismo Atolondrado. Both in poerty and novels, the Cucurto experience is an explosion of music and insolence with invented words, insults to politicians and reflections on literary masters.  Other books of poetry include La Máquina de hacer paraguayitos (2000), 20 pungas contra un pasajero (2003) and Hatuchay (2005). Some of his novels include Fer (Eloísa Cartonera, 2003), Panambí (Eloisa Cartonera, 2004) and Las aventuras del Sr. Maiz (Interona, 2005).   His poems have appeared in anthologies published in Mexico, Chile and Germany.  His 2003 novel, Cosa de Negros (Nigga Shit), made him a cult author especially among young readers.  These novels and poems describe the Dominican, Peruvian and Paraguayan immigration of the mid-1990s to Buenos Aires.  In 2005, 2006 and 2007 he received a scholarship from Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart.</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>artists-in-residence: Washington Cucurto and Maria Gomez</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/4046/artists-in-residence-washington-cucurto-and-maria-gomez.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/4046/artists-in-residence-washington-cucurto-and-maria-gomez.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Oct 2009 20:31:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Monica Jovanovich]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steve Fagin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teddy Cruz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/?p=4046</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[October 14 - 16, 2009 at <em>h</em><strong>G</strong>
Commission: Washington Cucurto short story, <em>El Hijo</em> 
Writer and literary collective, Eloisa Cartonera; Buenos Aires, Argentina]]></description>
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<p>From October 14 &#8211; 16, 2009 <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong> and <strong>Maria Gomez</strong> of the Argentine literary collective<strong> Eloisa Cartonera</strong> were Artists-In-Residence at the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>.  Cucurto was commissioned by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> to write his short story, <em>El Hijo,</em> based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s text, <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975) for the hG, Spare Parts project<em> A Crime Has Many Stories.</em> A catalog of the entire project and a limited edition Survival Kit was provided to the participants at Malba to facilitate their journey. Both were produced in collaboration with Eloisa Cartonera.</p>
<p>On October 15, a Garage Talk was held presenting Cucurto and Gomez in conversation with <strong>Steve Fagin, Eloisa Haudenschild, Teddy Cruz</strong> (architect, estudio teddy cruz), <strong>Juli Carson </strong>(Director, UCI Art Gallery) <strong>Jennifer Flores-Sternad</strong> (art critic and curator), and <strong>Monica Jovanovich</strong>.   Steve Fagin and Juli Carson were moderators and respondents.  All the October 15 participants were part of the November 2008 <em>A Crime Has Many Stories</em> traverse in Buenos Aires. Cucurto read an excerpt from <em>El Hijo.</em></p>
<p>From October 16 &#8211; 18, 2008 Cucurto and Gomez traveled to Tijuana to present a lecture and a two-day workshop in conjunction with the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, inSite, Nortestacion, Epicentrico and the Escuela de Artes de la Universidad Autonoma de Baja California.</p>
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<p>A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  In response to Piglia&#8217;s short story, the project generated two site-specific pieces by Argentine artists <strong>Rosalba Mirabella</strong> and <strong>Roberto Jacoby</strong> and <strong>Fernanda Laguna</strong>, and a commissioned story,<em> El Hijo</em>, by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.  The literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> produced a limited edition Survival Kit and a catalog of the entire project.</p>
<h5>About Eloisa Cartonera</h5>
<p>Eloísa Cartonera is a social and community-related artistic project in Buenos Aries, Argentina. The central office is a cardboard store – a place where cardboard and paper is sold – named “No hay cuchillo sin Rosas” (“There’s no knife without Roses”). There, cardboard collectors, cartoneros, exchange ideas with artists and writers. The cardboard collector is a South American phenomenon and many times there are entire families working as cartoneros.   Eloísa Cartonera invents its own aesthetic; open minded and unbiased, wishing to produce reciprocal learning, fueled by creativity. Books with cardboard covers are edited on the street; these covers, painted by hand with temperas and paintbrush, are made of the cardboard that was collected in the streets.  Eloisa Cartonera publishes unknown, border and vanguard texts of Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Costa Rica, Uruguay, Brazil and Peru. They have a roster of world-renowned authors including Ricardo Piglia, Cesar Aira, Gonzalo Milan (Chile), and Luis Chavez (Costa Rica).<br />
<a href="http://www.eloisacartonera.com.ar/" target="_blank"> Click here to visit their website.</a></p>
<h5>About Washington Cucurto</h5>
<p>Santiago Vega, better known as Washington Cucurto, is an Argentine writer, poet, narrator and editor.  He is one of the founders and directors of Eloisa Cartonera, a publishing house that disseminates contemporary Latin American literature. With the publication of his first book of poetry, Zelarayán (1998), he burst forth on to the South American cultural scene creating, along with other poets, the style today known as Realismo atolondrado. Both in poerty and novels, the Cucurto experience is an explosion of music and impudence with invented words, insults to politicians and reflections on literary masters. Other books of poetry include La Máquina de hacer paraguayitos (2000), 20 pungas contra un pasajero (2003) and Hatuchay (2005). Some of his novels include Fer (Eloísa Cartonera, 2003), Panambí (Eloisa Cartonera, 2004) and Las aventuras del Sr. Maiz (Interona, 2005).  His poems have appeared in anthologies published in Mexico, Chile and Germany.  His 2003 novel, Cosa de Negros (Nigga Shit), made him a cult author especially among young readers.  These novels and poems describe the Dominican, Peruvian and Paraguayan immigration of the mid-1990s to Buenos Aires.  In 2005, 2006 and 2007 he received a scholarship from Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart, a public entity funded by the German government.</p>
<p>With the publication of Cucurto’s first book of poetry, Zelarayán (1998), he burst forth on to the South American cultural scene creating, along with other poets, the style today known as Realismo Atolondrado. Both in poerty and novels, the Cucurto experience is an explosion of music and insolence with invented words, insults to politicians and reflections on literary masters.  Other books of poetry include La Máquina de hacer paraguayitos (2000), 20 pungas contra un pasajero (2003) and Hatuchay (2005). Some of his novels include Fer (Eloísa Cartonera, 2003), Panambí (Eloisa Cartonera, 2004) and Las aventuras del Sr. Maiz (Interona, 2005).   His poems have appeared in anthologies published in Mexico, Chile and Germany.  His 2003 novel, Cosa de Negros (Nigga Shit), made him a cult author especially among young readers.  These novels and poems describe the Dominican, Peruvian and Paraguayan immigration of the mid-1990s to Buenos Aires.  In 2005, 2006 and 2007 he received a scholarship from Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>A Crime Has Many Stories artworks donated to Villa Fiorito, Buenos Aires</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1413/a-crime-has-many-stories-artworks-donated-to-villa-fiorito-buenos-aires.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1413/a-crime-has-many-stories-artworks-donated-to-villa-fiorito-buenos-aires.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2009 19:20:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MALBA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steve Fagin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teddy Cruz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Donations, Fernanda Laguna and Roberto Jacoby&#8217;s project for A Crime Has Many Stories, was completed in early December. The replicas Laguna and Jacoby created were selected from the Museo de Calcos&#8217; collection and given to the Belleza y Felicidad (ByF) art space in the community of Fiorito, a small town outside of Buenos Aires. ByF [...]]]></description>
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<p><em>Donations</em>, Fernanda Laguna and Roberto Jacoby&#8217;s project for<em> A Crime Has Many Stories</em>, was completed in early December. The replicas Laguna and Jacoby created were selected from the Museo de Calcos&#8217; collection and given to the Belleza y Felicidad (ByF) art space in the community of Fiorito, a small town outside of Buenos Aires. ByF Fiorito, open since 2003, functions as a workshop and art center for local children.  </p>
<p>Below are photos of the installation and videos of their presentation at the Museo de Calcos on November 29, 2008 and transfer of the pieces to Villa Fiorito on December 2, 2008 as part of <em>A Crime Has Many Stories.</em></p>
<p>A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  In response to Piglia&#8217;s short story, the project generated two site-specific pieces by Argentine artists <strong>Rosalba Mirabella</strong> and <strong>Roberto Jacoby</strong> and <strong>Fernanda Laguna</strong>, and a commissioned story,<em> El Hijo</em>, by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.  The literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> produced a limited edition Survival Kit and a catalog of the entire project.</p>
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<p><object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="500" height="405" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/KuwuE2LM69s&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0&amp;color1=0x3a3a3a&amp;color2=0x999999&amp;border=1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="405" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/KuwuE2LM69s&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0&amp;color1=0x3a3a3a&amp;color2=0x999999&amp;border=1" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>Roberto Jacoby, 1944, Buenos Aires, Argentina</strong><br />
Roberto Jacoby, an artist and a sociologist, is considered to be one of the first conceptual artists. In 1966 he co-published the Manifesto of Media Art that proposed a dematerialized art genre that made use of social material, the mass media and various communication structures. Almost all of his work has been collaborative and it has produced various actions, events and happenings.  Jacoby showed at the Instituto Di Tella and in 1969, after the Tucumán Arde communications campaign and the publication of the clandestine magazine Sobre, he gave up working in the visual arts and instead investigated social conflict and political epistemology. In the 1980s, he joined the pop group Virus as a songwriter and staged shows and multimedia parties, among others, the Club Social Deportivo y Cultural Eros. Virtually his entire output since the 1960s has been designed to intervene in the circuit of communication and actions through the use of technology as a tool for collaborative creation. He co-founded Ramona, a magazine of the visual art and grounded Proyecto Venus, a virtual and offline community that issued its own currency and several artists&#8217; networks. He was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in 2002.</p>
<p><strong>Fernanda Laguna, 1972 Buenos Aires, Argentina</strong><br />
Fernanda Laguna graduated from the Prilidiano Pueyrredon School of Fine Art, her work combines literature, installation, performance and painting.  Since 1992, Laguna has been active in the local and international art world with multiple solo and collective exhibitions and in 1994 she was selected to be part of Guillermo Kuitca’s program for young artists.  From 1999 to 2008 she and Cecilia Pavon (1999-2001) ran the art space and publishing house Belleza y Felicidad where she curated exhibitions and published books of poetry and fiction including El Loco, La ama de casa, Salvador Bahia, Ella y Yo, Los celos no ayudan-la culpa tampoco, Samanta and amigas. In 2003 she opened a branch of Belleza y Felicidad in Villa Fiorito and in 2008 her workshop for teenagers was included in the public school, Number 44, in Villa Fiorito. Laguna’s work has been featured in many publications such as The Nineties from Fondo Nacional de las Artes, the catalog of Donations and Acquisitions of Malba in 2007, and in 2005, the British magazine ID selected Laguna as one of the two hundred and fifty upcoming artists.  Ines Katzenstein, Argentine curator and art historian, writes &#8220;Fernanda Laguna epitomizes what you expect from a present day artist, not only because of her work but also for her activity in the art circuit as a gallery owner and curator. Laguna is a poet and fiction writer as well. She is a creator within a wide range of activities and this makes her a model whose influence will grow with time.”</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Chronicle of a Commissioned Crime: &#8220;C&#8221; Day by Francisca Mancini, Arte Magazine</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3763/chronicle-of-a-commissioned-crime-c-day-by-francisca-mancini-arte-magazine.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3763/chronicle-of-a-commissioned-crime-c-day-by-francisca-mancini-arte-magazine.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 06 Dec 2008 23:18:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alejandro Ruiz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MALBA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the haudenschildGarage, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story La Loca y el Relato del Crimen (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce and Alejandro Ruiz.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  In response to Piglia&#8217;s short story, the project generated two site-specific pieces by Argentine artists <strong>Rosalba Mirabella</strong> and <strong>Roberto Jacoby</strong> and <strong>Fernanda Laguna</strong>, and a commissioned story,<em> El Hijo</em>, by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.  The literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> produced a limited edition Survival Kit and a catalog of the entire project.</p>
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<h3>Chronicle of a Commissioned Crime – &#8220;C&#8221; Day: A Crime Has Many Stories</h3>
<p><strong>By Francisca Mancini for <em>Arte Magazine</em>, Buenos Aires, December 2008</strong></p>
<p><strong>Date</strong>: Saturday, November 29th, 2008<br />
<strong>16:00 Hours</strong><br />
<strong>Location</strong>: Malba<br />
<strong>Activity</strong>: Project Presentation </p>
<p>Heat, a lot of heat, tropical heat. Heavy and uncertain weather.</p>
<p>–Do you know what this is about?</p>
<p>–No, I&#8217;m not sure, I think we&#8217;re going to follow the clues of a crime. </p>
<p>–Oh.</p>
<p>(Silence)</p>
<p>The line in front of the auditorium grew as the appointed hour approached. We all wanted to know the same thing: What would happen the rest of the afternoon? What was this all about?</p>
<p>The doors open and we all enter, one by one, filing past the T-shirts and catalogues by Eloisa Cartonera that were exhibited on stands. </p>
<p>The presentation begins: In their disorderly excitement, the organizers attempt to explain what we will be doing for the rest of the day. Four years ago, Eloisa Haudenschild, an Argentine living in the United States, founded an artistic platform known as the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, from which she commissions and finances artistic projects that take place in different locations around the world. For the first time, the destination was Buenos Aires. The project of <strong>A Crime Has Many Stories</strong> had as its starting point a text by Ricardo Piglia titled <em>The Madwoman and the Story of the Crime</em>. It was co-curated by Judi Werthein and Sonia Becce, and called together Rosalba Mirabella, Roberto Jacoby, Fernanda Laguna and Washington Cucurto. The artists came up with urban interventions that would guide us on this journey through the city and that would end at a street party in front of Eloisa Cartonera publishers, which had been in charge of the catalogue. They introduce us to the artists responsible for our destiny as they announce a change in plans: one of the locations we were supposed to visit had burned down the day before and they had relocated it elsewhere. The first crime? The prospect was rather unsettling and adrenaline-charged. </p>
<p>A map of Buenos Aires appears on the auditorium screen while they inform us that they are going to hand out survival kits. The sense of calm that the explanations given by organizers Steve Fagin, Eloisa Haudesnchild and Monica Jovanovich had given the audience suddenly dissolved. Survival kit? What&#8217;s that? Survive what? What do you mean a place burned down? </p>
<p>The image of Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s mouth (the neighborhood and his mouth at the same time!) reading his story on the auditorium screen signaled the beginning of the journey. </p>
<p>Torrential downpour. The street was deserted and all the participants stared at the buses that had been placed at our disposal to take us from one point to another, with our noses stuck to the glass doors of the museum that nobody dared cross. While waiting, we all searched the contents of the survival kit with the hope of finding something waterproof. Some discovered in the chipás a good way of calming their anxiety. </p>
<p>The situation at this point was worthy of Un chien andalou–all of us soaked, traveling in school buses through flooded streets without street lights, to arrive at Rosalba Mirabella&#8217;s (new) space.</p>
<p><strong>18:00 Hours</strong><br />
<strong>Location</strong>: Space in Tucumán and Salguero.<br />
<strong>Activity</strong>: Artist Rosalba Mirabella&#8217;s piece.</p>
<p>The rain had taken pity on us, and had decided to stop. Once inside the garage, set up the day before, we found ourselves before the artist&#8217;s intervention. Two giant screens simultaneously projected images of the previous location and the original installation. On a table set up like a memorial, were the charred remains of what had once been the artist&#8217;s computer. Many of the participants kept on eating chipás, storing nutrients in case of another catastrophe or a crime, an attitude that given the circumstances seemed very logical to me. </p>
<p><strong>19:00 Hours</strong>: Following the clues we board the collective speedboats again and head toward the southern coastline. </p>
<p><strong>19:30 Hours</strong><br />
<strong>Location</strong>: Museo de Calcos<br />
<strong>Activity</strong>: Piece by artists Fernanda Laguna and Roberto Jacoby. </p>
<p>For many it was our first time at the Museo the Calcos Ernesto de la Cárcova. Taking this situation into account, the artists had selected a guide to give us a tour. We then entered a gallery where there were bundles covered with sheets and a projector. </p>
<p>Laguna and Jacoby had decided to make a donation of sculptural works to the new headquarters of the Beauty and Happiness space at Villa Fiorito. The crime of forgery of works of art was redeemed by authorized copies and tracings, and master Duchamp&#8217;s seal of approval. </p>
<p><strong>20:30 Hours</strong>: Once again aboard the (by now) well-loved buses, we depart for La Boca. Anxious to see Eloisa Cartonera and to hear Washington Cucurto, who would be giving a live reading. </p>
<p><strong>21:00 Hours</strong><br />
<strong>Location</strong>: Headquarters of the Eloisa Cartonera cooperative, La Boca<br />
<strong>Activity</strong>: Washington Cucurto&#8217;s reading. Party at Eloisa Cartonera. </p>
<p>We got off at the stop, one of the most alluring of the day for many, and we came across another unforeseen event that, among the participants and in honor of the project, we had termed a &#8220;crime&#8221;. This new &#8220;crime&#8221;, also caused by the rains, would take us, following a tour and introduction to the activities of the Eloisa Cartonera collective, to the fireman&#8217;s ballroom in La Boca: the new location designated for the party, since doing it outdoors, as was originally intended, would have been a real crime of colds and pneumonias. </p>
<p>After waiting a few minutes next to the fire engines, we went up to the first floor where we met with Cucurto&#8217;s reading, two live cumbia bands, choripanes, and local neighbors to celebrate the end (?) of the day. As a keepsake, Cucurto&#8217;s story <em>The Son</em>. </p>
<p><strong>00:30 Hours</strong><br />
<strong>Location</strong>: Uncertain.<br />
<strong>Activity</strong>: Undefined.</p>
<p>The shortest distance between two points is never a straight line</p>
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		<title>The Artwork Killer by Diego Erlan, Clarin Magazine</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1312/the-artwork-killer-by-diego-erlan-clarin-magazine.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1312/the-artwork-killer-by-diego-erlan-clarin-magazine.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Nov 2008 21:37:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alejandro Ruiz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MALBA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the haudenschildGarage, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story La Loca y el Relato del Crimen (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce and Alejandro Ruiz.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  In response to Piglia&#8217;s short story, the project generated two site-specific pieces by Argentine artists <strong>Rosalba Mirabella</strong> and <strong>Roberto Jacoby</strong> and <strong>Fernanda Laguna</strong>, and a commissioned story,<em> El Hijo</em>, by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.  The literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> produced a limited edition Survival Kit and a catalog of the entire project.</p>
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<h3>The Artwork Killer</h3>
<p><strong>By Diego Erlan for <em>Clarin</em>, Buenos Aires, December 2008</strong></p>
<p>The audience prepares for the excursion. Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s story already happened: the video-projected reading of <em>The Madwoman and the Story of a Crime</em> that was seen at the Malba auditorium last Saturday that began with a close-up image of the writer&#8217;s mouth and ended with the figure of Piglia, in the distance, in an empty and dark auditorium. The presentation of <strong>A Crime Has Many Stories </strong> is over, the &#8220;exquisite cadaver&#8221; project that collector Eloisa Haudenschild had been preparing for almost a year along with film director Steve Fagin and the collaboration of Alejandro Ruiz, Judi Werthein and Sonia Becce within the framework of the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, a platform that seeks &#8220;cultural experimentation, play and conversation&#8221;. The explanation for the goal of this project has already occurred: &#8220;to generate a dynamic event that takes place across literature, art and the city&#8221;. Some of the participating artists have already gone up on stage: from Roberto Jacoby and the Tucumán-born artist Rosalba Mirabella, to Washington Cucurto and the troupe of Eloisa Cartonera publishers, that had set up a kiosk with T-shirts and books at the entrance of the space and was in charge of putting together the catalog of the event. The &#8220;survival kit&#8221; has already been presented, which those assisting will receive to begin a journey that will take them from the museum to a abandoned garage on Tucumán Street, from there to the Museo de Calcos, and finally to La Boca. But when the audience spills out of the auditorium enthused, it encounters the rain, a gray wall that looks like a huge blank television screen. &#8220;Deluge in Buenos Aires,&#8221; announces the radio. Avello&#8217;s luminous work in the museum esplanade is at the red limit due to the thunder and the water that drenches the wood. Suddenly those assisting search the damn survival kit for something that will help them survive the weather. There is a map, some chipás, but no raincoat. Not even a plastic supermarket bag to improvise with. The most adventurous of the lot make a run for the school buses parked in front. </p>
<p>At nightfall the event will conclude with the reading of <em>The Son</em> the story by Cucurto, but before that, the first stop. The abandoned garage on Tucumán Street. Peeling walls, water-logged corners, darkness. There, artist Rosalba Mirabella asks a woman as blonde as she is what she thinks of the piece. &#8220;It&#8217;s perfect, cousin,&#8221; says the blonde woman. &#8220;I&#8217;m serious, look, I&#8217;m getting goose bumps,&#8221; says the blonde woman without averting her eyes from the screens that show different images of the apartment where Mirabella worked for a month and twenty five days, an apartment located in San Telmo that now appears to be destroyed. This isn&#8217;t the original piece. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t want to talk about the piece I was working on, the piece I lost, or about what happened,&#8221; the Tucumán-born artist told me. But one finds out: a fire destroyed her piece. All of her work. All that is left are the three screens that show the remains of the apartment, a close-up of the artist facing the camera, describing the place, and a third off to the side that shows her staring at the ground. &#8220;The only thing left is a wrecked laptop,&#8221; she says and points to a corner. A charred Olivetti resting on a wooden box. Nobody says anything, but those returning to the school buses to continue with the excursion know who the guilty party is. Who killed the work of art. Rosalba also knows, but she doesn&#8217;t say. That much is clear. </p>
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		<title>The Itinerary of a Crime by Justina Canton, EPU Magazine</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/4056/the-itinerary-of-a-crime-by-justina-canton-epu-magazine.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/4056/the-itinerary-of-a-crime-by-justina-canton-epu-magazine.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Nov 2008 20:45:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alejandro Ruiz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MALBA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the haudenschildGarage, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story La Loca y el Relato del Crimen (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce and Alejandro Ruiz.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  In response to Piglia&#8217;s short story, the project generated two site-specific pieces by Argentine artists <strong>Rosalba Mirabella</strong> and <strong>Roberto Jacoby</strong> and <strong>Fernanda Laguna</strong>, and a commissioned story,<em> El Hijo</em>, by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.  The literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> produced a limited edition Survival Kit and a catalog of the entire project.</p>
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<h4>The Itinerary of a Crime<br />
</h4>
<h5>By Justina Cantón / Photographs by Justina Cantón and Jorge Miño</h5>
<p>The shortest distance between two points is never a straight line, at least on this occasion. The invitation was more than tempting: we were going to be a part of an urban intervention organized by the<em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> for the first time in Buenos Aires. It began at the Malba at 16:30 and ended at a party in Boca. And at the foot of the convening email a mysterious and inciting postscript: “With your RSVP we will provide you with a ‘Survival Kit’ for your itinerary made by Eloisa Cartonera.” We headed over there without delay.</p>
<h5>Trigger Shot<br />
</h5>
<p>First things first:<em> A Crime Has Many Stories</em> is an exquisite cadaver project commissioned and produced by Eloisa Haudenschild and Steve Fagin of the<em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>. It is based on <em>The Madwoman and the Story of a Crime</em> (1975), the short story by Ricardo Piglia that takes place in Buenos Aires, and was cooked up by co-conspirators Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce and Alejandro Ruiz. Piglia’s text generated two site-specific works and a short story commissioned from Argentine writer Washington Cucurto.</p>
<p>In May 2008 the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> traveled to Buenos Aires to meet with its curatorial assessment committee. Argentine curator Sonia Becce and Argentine artist Judi Werthein selected a group of artists for the project working in installation, photography and video. From this group, the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> and Alejandro Ruiz selected the artists Roberto Jacoby, Fernanda Laguna and Rosalba Mirabella.</p>
<p>“The goal of this project is to generate a dynamic event that takes place across literature, art and the city. Our hope, in bringing together artists from the 1960s with young artists working today, and blurring the border between literature and plastic arts, is to ‘interpret’ the continuity and sphere of Argentine culture in all its richness. We believe that the role of Latin America and Argentina in general has been enormously underestimated, and we hope that this event, in a modest way, will support the growing awareness of the quality and specificity of Argentina’s current and historical contributions to world culture. This project is dedicated to the wisdom, the energy and the generous spirit of debate that Olivier Debroise (1952-2008) provided us with as regards Latin American culture. We wish to continue that path with our project,” says the<em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>.</p>
<h5>The Target<br />
</h5>
<p>The chronicle of our itinerant Saturday begins at the reception in the Malba auditorium. The clan of Eloisa Cartonera and Cucurto arranges the survival kits they put together to guide us during our voyage. The guests begin perusing some colored books laid out on the tables. One after the other, we arrive and settle into the seats of the museum’s auditorium. A video and the projected image of Ricardo Piglia; a soundtrack and the reading of <em>The Madwoman and the Story of a Crime</em> by the author himself seated before us: “Overweight, spread-out, melancholy, the green fil-a-fil nylon suit…” he began. What was supposed to come out of all this? I was seated and felt myself an accomplice. I thought I was supposed to decipher who had committed a crime. Was I a spectator? Victim? Detective? I was a witness. A movable feast of food and culture was given free reign.</p>
<p>I put my hand inside the kit and find a printed map of the tour. Five minutes had passed since the end of the first action, that of the story. And aboard a school bus we were about to begin tracing the map route on our way to the second stop. Take your place everybody, and suddenly we were preschool buddies again.</p>
<p>Sure enough, there were unforeseen events. The first, a downpour that was neither in the program notes nor at the following destination. Furthermore, a correction had been made to the map. It so happened that Rosalba Mirabella had spent two months preparing a crime in one of the city’s apartments, two months of work with a lot of paper and a lot of stories, and the crime arrived in the guise of fire. Yes gentleman, the apartment burned down just one week before our visit. So then we found ourselves in a garage with two huge telling screens on which Rosalba constantly described what the apartment was like, and on the other one she was there in silence.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, sodas and more chipás. Next are Jacoby, Laguna and Judi. We were at the C.I.A. (Center for Investigations on Art). Outside the rain continues. I don’t know what time it was, as I had surrendered to the experience; I think we all had. And once again we piled into the bus. On this trip friends seemed better acquainted or there was more familiarity. The streets were wet, the windows foggy, and in the chaos of the transit-weather the fire engines showed up. Sirens, traffic lights, and another flourish in the map that takes us to the Museo de Calcos. Calcos: I thought of cartoons–I am such an ignoramus! A place full of sculptures, replicas, the majestic David at the door, the Pietà at our right, all the masters together in one gallery. The sculptures, the feast of cheese and wine, and the unceasing rain.</p>
<p>And suddenly it was time to depart for the last stop in Boca. It was pouring rain, our destination was flooding, and I hear Steve Fagin say: “This is epic, first came the fire, now comes the water…” We were experiencing the legacy, the passage from the seemingly the same to a world of difference, as intended by the duo Laguna-Jacoby. Now it was Eloisa Cartonera’s turn: a magical place full of colors and words, books everywhere, and the water that took us to an additional destination: thanks to the kindness of the neighborhood firemen we moved into their headquarters ballroom. That’s how The Son comes about, a recently commissioned detective story by author Washington Cucurto, written in response to Ricardo Piglia’s story. And this time it was being read by Eloisa Cartonera’s art collective. And there were children running around and people listening. It was the moment of the final touch: free reign to the power of cumbia, beer, wine, empanadas and choripán; and everybody dancing until midnight struck and the school bus took us home. Exquisite!</p>
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		<title>Coverage of A Crime Has Many Stories by Tomas Espina, Pagina 12</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1400/coverage-of-a-crime-has-many-stories-by-tomas-espina-pagina-12.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1400/coverage-of-a-crime-has-many-stories-by-tomas-espina-pagina-12.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Nov 2008 07:12:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Crime Has Many Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alejandro Ruiz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Cartonera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fernanda Laguna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Judi Werthein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MALBA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Piglia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roberto Jacoby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rosalba Mirabella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spare Parts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington Cucurto]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/?p=1400</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Below is an excerpt from Tomás Espina&#8217;s Pagina 12 (December 2008) article discussing Roberto Jacoby and Fernanda Laguna&#8217;s project Donacions which was part of the haudenschildGarage, hG, Spare Parts project A Crime Has Many Stories.
A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the haudenschildGarage, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Below is an excerpt from Tomás Espina&#8217;s <em>Pagina 12</em> (December 2008) article discussing Roberto Jacoby and Fernanda Laguna&#8217;s project <em>Donacions</em> which was part of the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, hG, Spare Parts project <em>A Crime Has Many Stories</em>.</p>
<p>A Crime Has Many Stories is an exquisite corpse project commissioned and produced by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>, based on Ricardo Piglia&#8217;s short story <em>La Loca y el Relato del Crimen</em> (1975). The November 29, 2008 multidisciplinary, one-day traverse of the city of Buenos Aires was plotted with co-conspirators <strong>Judi Werthein, Sonia Becce</strong> and <strong>Alejandro Ruiz</strong>.  In response to Piglia&#8217;s short story, the project generated two site-specific pieces by Argentine artists <strong>Rosalba Mirabella</strong> and <strong>Roberto Jacoby</strong> and <strong>Fernanda Laguna</strong>, and a commissioned story,<em> El Hijo</em>, by Argentine writer <strong>Washington Cucurto</strong>.  The literary collective <strong>Eloisa Cartonera</strong> produced a limited edition Survival Kit and a catalog of the entire project.</p>
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<blockquote><p>El Museo del Calco está ubicado en la Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes Ernesto de la Cárcova, a pasos de la reserva ecológica. Allí se albergan cientos de calcos de esculturas de diferentes épocas de la historia. Parte de la mística de este museo es que todas las piezas están distribuidas por los salones sin un criterio cronológico, sin distinción de estilos ni épocas. Como en una suerte de jeroglífico donde se mezclan todas las culturas, uno puede pasear por las salas como si atravesara de una sola vez cientos de años de historia, y si va silencioso nunca sabrá qué vino antes o después en esa madeja anacrónica.</p>
<p>A ese museo donde el tiempo parecía estar congelado ingresó una pieza muy particular: una réplica de una obra emblemática de Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968). Feuille de vigne Femelle –que puede verse por estos días en la muestra de la Fundación Proa en La Boca– es ahora parte del acervo del museo del calco.</p>
<p>El proyecto fue llevado a cabo por Fernanda Laguna y Roberto Jacoby y es parte de una iniciativa que tiene como contrapunto otra interesante arista. Pero antes hay que saber que esta obra de Duchamp es de por sí un molde (supuestamente es el negativo de una vagina) hecho en yeso y policromado. En el prólogo de El punto de vista anacrónico George Didi-Huberman dice respecto de esta pieza: “En estos objetos no hay nada que mirar porque tampoco hay invención formal, y no hay invención formal, porque son solo muestras, huellas –la no obra por excelencia”. Según leyes aún vigentes, los moldes hechos del natural no pueden tener derechos de autoría, o sea no pueden ser registradas como obra de alguien. Entonces, esta pieza legalmente no puede ser considerada obra. Ahora bien, también sabemos que desde Duchamp es ridículo pensar (por más leyes vigentes y prejuicios que existan) que eso no es una obra de arte. Duchamp mismo hizo más de 50 réplicas de esta pieza (en yeso y en bronce) y todas ellas son consideradas no sólo obras de arte sino también originales. Además, según Duchamp, no existen las copias, toda obra es original.</p>
<p>Entonces al ingresar esta obra al museo del calco, se abren dos opciones. O bien podemos pensar que es la única de las cincuenta y tantas réplicas que no es original y es la primera “copia” de Feuille de vigne Femelle que hay en el mundo (cosa que sería absurda siendo que es una obra de Duchamp). O podemos pensar que a partir de ahora todas las esculturas que conforman el museo del calco pasan a ser obras de arte originales. El David, Nike de Samotracia, los retratos romanos, las tumbas, los relieves precolombinos, etc: todas las réplicas que conforman el acervo del museo del calco, después de Duchamp, pasan a ser obras de arte originales. En ese punto es fascinante el legado que nos dejó este artista que (si queremos) aun hoy en día puede seguir desquiciando las nociones de autoría y originalidad que podamos tener sobre cualquier obra.</p>
<p>El proyecto de Laguna y Jacoby comprende una segunda instancia (o primera, da igual: fueron simultáneas) que también sugiere un corrimiento en cuanto al origen u originalidad de una obra. Como contrapunto de este proyecto el Museo del Calco donó cinco calcos “originales” de obras históricas al Centro Cultural Belleza y Felicidad de Villa Fiorito. Una cabeza de Buda del siglo XII, una cabeza de Palas Atenea en versión romana del siglo III, un fragmento del David de Miguel Angel, una cabeza de Cristo del período románico y una de Afrodita del período clásico griego. Todas estas piezas formarán ahora parte del Centro Cultural.</p>
<p>Entre las cinco piezas donadas hay una que es quizás el protagonista de esta acción: el fragmento de la escultura del David de Miguel Angel. El pie izquierdo, el pie que casi no se apoya del héroe que venció a Goliat hace miles de años, será emplazado en un espacio público a la entrada de Villa Fiorito.</p>
<p>Si hay algo de lo que el arte es capaz es de desarticularse y a su vez desarticularnos. Cualquier obra se hace con el que la piensa y la mira, y allí no se sabe nunca qué pasara. Sin embargo, arriesgo una hipótesis: como todos sabemos quién fue el héroe que nació en Villa Fiorito, no sería raro pensar que ese pie izquierdo llegue a ser un símbolo muy diferente del que pueda tener en cualquier otro lugar del mundo. Ese pie no sólo pasará a ser un punto de encuentro para los que visitan y habitan la Villa, sino también seguramente será una suerte de homenaje a un héroe nacional muy lejano en el tiempo al David y sin embargo muy cercano en sus características.</p></blockquote>
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