Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Abstract close-up of amber resin enveloping an array of materials including archival documents.

Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio: My name's Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio. I'm an artist from L.A., joining here from Altadena, California, which is in the foothills.

The amber material is something I've been working on for a while and it's the interior fluids of the pine tree. And it's been altered to try to remove all of the things inside of it that make it fluid, that make it non-stable. And so this material, over the course of several million years, starts to undergo a process of a fossilization, of crystallization and it alters the chemical structure of it. And so what we've done is through different methods of heat and vacuum forming and all of these different ways, accelerated that process to the point that it's a hard substance at all times. It's never soft.

Narrator: But the material isn’t totally stable.

Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio: During the duration of the show, will alter its shape significantly. As the work starts to unfold, at different times, there'll be different objects visible, different sections of documents visible and then being covered up again.

Narrator: The documents come from the archives of nonprofits in Los Angeles fighting for the rights of Central American immigrants. 

Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio: When I started researching this amber material years ago, it was actually happening separately, but at the same time from when I was working on different digitization of archives from different nonprofits and communities in L.A. I think about how time and history is very cyclical. There's a lot of things that are happening now that have happened in various iterations over and over and over again. And so we can learn from these amazing stories of resistance, of community, of solidarity, of organizing that have happened, and from the successes as well as the failures and the parallels between these things. The separation of children from their families in Salvador in history is something that has happened again and again and again even within my family. 


Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio, Paloma Blanca Deja Volar/White Dove Let us Fly, 2024. Modified amber, volcanic stone, pigeon wings, ceramic, cloths, archival documents, and found objects. Collection of the artist; courtesy Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles and Mexico City © Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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