Avalanche

Collective April 2014

Avalanche

I am going again with Ale to photograph the Nuclear Plant and the Nuclear City in Juraguá, again I am excited to see the dome, the cement moon hide among the banana trees. I remember the excitement it produced in me the first time, I thought I would find some ruins and I find a Taj Mahal of concrete, an apparition, a witness of history, it thrills me like the first time, to me, this was always the photo, the first vision. Again I have the feeling of entering zero degree, in the zone, like the Stalker, again I have the feeling that I’m going to see a hen with two heads, a ferret with seven legs, concrete and concrete was what defined everything once more, the zero zone, again we entered the zone, a mental nucleus, the dome as a brain, gray matter,”the architecture as incorruptible witness of history”, I recalled Paz’s phrase and then the phrase written in Russian and Spanish in the reactor’s mouth: “let the atom be worker and not soldier”. I lower the speed. Fidel’s nuclear projection, socialist, anti-imperialist, utopian, I remember him talking about the project in the eighties, we were going to solve everything. The Nuclear Plant as a metaphor of the margin that always existed between reality and his dream, the phantom zone. Many times I have asked myself if the Cuban revolution from 1959 would have been possible without the personality of Fidel. The history of Cuba is a history of opposition to great forces, perhaps the cement moon is the expression of this. I lower the speed once more, the dome, which had hidden among the banana trees reappears little by little amid the marabú. The road is full of holes, of cows, this time I must write something about this. Everything is drier. Campins has asked me to write a text for the exhibition where Ale is going to exhibit the photos of the Nuclear Plant and the NuclearCity, together with a series he has of the community of Minas de Frío, an abandoned community in the Sierra Maestra and some short films by Capó. The last time we had wanted to come with him too, but it wasn’t possible.
-You saw Capó’s documentaries?-  I ask Ale.
– This is an arid zone – he says, looking outside- it reminds me of a phrase, I think it’s from The Wild Palm Trees, who wrote that? Salinger?
– Faulkner?
– Well, I used a text, no matter whose text it may be, the text told about a place where whatever grew, grew with effort, but it also died with effort.
– A tundra?
The road twists, the dome disappears, crossroads, cart, black dog running at my side. Somewhat like this is the history of Cuba, of richness for a few, a reality of tundra, I think, of poverty, black and white poverty, this place is particularly so, a zero zone, it was going to be launched again with the petrochemical industry and now everything has stopped, I don’t know if it’s because of Chávez’s death or what, whole bays empty, sound of iron falling in an abandoned place, a fatum.
– I was asking you about Capó’’ documentaries, which are part of Campins’ curatorial work, because I saw one that I can’t stop thinking of, It’s not among the ones that will be in the exhibition, I think the title is Nos quedamos (We Remained), it’s about a town that has been invaded by bees, the bees live inside the walls, it opens with a very strong image, the image of a woman’s eye, an old woman, a white cloudy eye on a dark skin, I have that image in the retina, it moves with me. The bees sting people in the eyes, sting animals and leave them blind, at least there are several images of eyes stung by bees and two testimonies of blind persons.
– I told Campins to talk to you about the text.
– I really told him that I would give him part of the book I’m writing, I proposed to him to take my notebook, that my notebook be the catalog, or my telephone, which is where I’m writing now, but he didn’t like the idea. He said he would have to ask permission for it from the people in the gallery, treat it as if it were a piece in the exhibition.
– I thought he’d like that, because of the way in which he is conceiving the exhibition as something multiple, video, photography, painting.
– Have you seen the documentaries already?
– I think I saw one- There’s another one about a guy who lives in an abandoned boat near an industrial zone, he’s a hermit but he has that Stalker mechanics too, post industry, destruction, loneliness, like the abandoned building of the Nuclear City. There’s another one entitled Inertia. Somehow it is related to the plant, full of abandoned iron, full of oblivion, of a defeat, of a void. Although the Stalker has that threatening, supernatural element, in any case the documentary deals with people to go to a ruin, a dismantled sugar factory. The Hershey sugar factory, a town that lost its center, its raison d’etre, its nucleus.
-An attrezzo reality, where it is hard to grow, but where whatever is born does not die easily-, I think that is the phrase, I’ve used it at times as statement. What I’ve used is rather my interpretation of the phrase.
– An attrezzo reality, not a tundra, dry bushes, there is something in those paintings that Campins showed me that makes me a little uneasy, like those Peter Doig things, or the stories by Catedral, by Carver, as if there was a tension, I’m intrigued by that ability of Campins of making a landscape with almost nothing, realities that seem endless with almost nothing, I like his sense of the landscape, although I may not know well what this is, his pictorial sense, he’s beyond the technique, he does it the same way in a stone of a few centimeters and on a large canvas, a sensation of infiniteness, of space.

The plant reappears. Now the landscape is much more arid there has been a fire. We park on the edge; one can feel the electricity running through the cables that go to “the atomic city”. The countryside has a black shade, a tint, the clouds hide, the light changes in a minute. I think of the relation of history with matter, an interest in the human, the feeling of abandonment, a readymade but the other way around, the nevermade, a technical reality assaulted by something organic. In the end, when the human beings retreat the rest of nature invades, I don’t feel attracted only by the space, by the landscape, I feel attracted by the material they are made of, pipe rests transformed into water tanks in the peasants’ homes, in Cuba the matter is not destroyed, it is reused, history as something powerful and vulnerable at the same time.
Policeman – identification.
The sun hides in a cloud.
-You can’t remain.
– Marce, watch the sun.
Cold weather, wind, the clouds run, the light is veiled, the sun.
Neither the plant nor the building get to be ruins like Campins’ places in Minas de Frío or the hermit’s vessel in the documentary La Marea (The Tide) or El central Hershey (The Hershey Sugar Factory); the ruins of these buildings is in another category, they are ruins that never had any use, what was ruined in these buildings were not the buildings in themselves but the idea, the purpose for which they were conceived.
– Marce, watch the sun. I need a bit of light on top of the dome, contrast.
– I like gray clouds.
– You can’t remain.
The policeman is kind, we explain to him. He ends by talking about photography with Ale. I look at the dome, the immensity of the ruin, the immensity of the utopia. Time not only changes things and our perception of things, our perception of things changes although time does not change them. Speeches from the eighties, Caribe TV set, black and white, rocking chairs.
– I saw a publication in Facebook – Ale tells me – a photograph of a cassette and a pencil, it had a sign that read: “our children will not understand the relationship between these two things”. And it’s true, I used to go to parties with a pencil and a cassette in my pocket to rewind the themes.
No one under 30 years of age is going to understand our fascination for the Nuclear Plant. They did not live that moment; they did not listen to the speeches. My nephews who are 8 and 10 years old have not lived under the presidency of Fidel, at least not consciously. I miss that feeling I had when I was a boy of living in a country that was making progress, a country with a future.
– I think the title will be unfinished symphony for an atomic awakening, he says to me.
Police again.
– and that gadget, what does it do, scan? do you know what this place is?
What most turns my head from all these landscapes, from all of them, those of the ship, those of Minas de Frío painted by Campins, at least to me, is the vulnerability, the concrete Taj Mahal, which must be one of the most solid constructions ever built in Cuba, is still vulnerable. Not only was it going to be vulnerable to a hypothetic meltdown, like the Yankees say, molten downwards, would be the literal translation, they say that’s what happens, it’s vulnerable to time, vulnerable to history, and above all things, vulnerable to our way of perceiving it. The first image, the first emotion does not escape me, the concrete moon coming out among the banana trees, it was to very real. A post industrial reality. The first time we came I couldn’t avoid seeing the plant like that, one day after the cold war, a beautiful surface, defeated, a pure landscape, deprived of usefulness, an idea in expansion that contracted, a dwarf star. Today I see nothing but the complexity of history, and as part of it, the complexity of utopia. Today I see nothing but the human behind the cement moon, nothing but the human behind Minas de Frío, of the forgotten court. Voices in the train, inertia as expression of force, but also of immobility. The history of Cuba as the history of opposition to great things. Perhaps the cement moon is the expression of this same thing. The expression of utopia, or metaphor of The Old Man and the Sea, struggle against the elements, against the changing forces of history to arrive at the shore only with the shark’s fins.
Again that feeling of being in the zone, the feeling of being in front of something that was going to have enough energy to unleash a mass event. The shelf of the Nuclear Plant used as kitchen table at the peasants home. “The fortuitous meeting of an umbrella and a sewing machine on a dissection table.” Lautréamont?, the barking of a dog, the eye white, wasp white, television batteries, car batteries for the light. “All those things that, because they are together, we call universe”. Borges? A pencil, a cassette, Soviet Union, Cuba, USA, cold war. It was going to be a nuclear plant, but is it one? we were going to be a communist country, but…?
We penetrate deep into the woods amid the burnt marabú. Ale looks like a 19th century painter, now with tripod and scanning gadgets and policeman, I feel that his relation to the landscape is similar to Campins’ and Capó’s. The three share that fascination for the landscape, for the human inside the landscape.
– Marce, look at the sun.
– It’s going to be hidden for some time.
The cement moon, a sun that hides. Bananas.

Fragment of the book La tradición despótica  (The Despotic Tradition), Marcelo Morales.

Artworks

1979-1992

Alejandro González Méndez 2014

1972-1985

Alejandro González Méndez 2014

1982-1992

Alejandro González Méndez 2014

1974-1990

Alejandro González Méndez 2014

Unborn Nature

Alejandro Campins Fleita 2013

Drying Place

Alejandro Campins Fleita 2013

Born January 1st

Alejandro Campins Fleita 2013

The Tide

Armando Capó Ramos 2009

Inertia. All Pantographs Go to Heaven

Armando Capó Ramos 2008

Artists