Shifting Landscapes 

2024

A series of illustrated pages displayed in a glass case, featuring colorful, abstract designs and text on a wooden floor.

Enrique Chagoya: Hello, I'm Enrique Chagoya. I have a deep interest in pre-Columbian books. 

Narrator: Chagoya’s codices play with history, reversing colonial wins and losses.

Enrique Chagoya: Once I got a book about the history of the destruction of the pre-Columbian books in Mexico, it really blew my mind away what happened during the conquest of Mexico and especially the conquest of Mexico City. Between 1519 and 1521, the library of Texcoco, the Aztec King of Texcoco, was burnt to ashes. Not a single book survived. There was mass suicide of the indigenous people who witnessed the burning of the books.

Narrator: The works take a tongue-in-cheek approach to cannibalism. At the same time, they undermine archaic stereotypes about who the cannibals were–mostly Inidgenous people. 

Enrique Chagoya: To me, the word cannibal could apply to somebody who takes over something else like a conquistador who takes over somebody else's territory, land, culture, it's a cannibal to me. But in art, how do you translate that in art. Artists cannibalize everything all the time since Picasso, who used to appropriate ancient African masks. I'm just trying to be playful with the work and try to express my feelings, sometimes my anxieties, my sense of humor because I rather laugh than cry most of the time.


Installation view of Shifting Landscapes (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, November 1, 2024–January 2026). Enrique Chagoya, El Regreso del Canibal Macrobiotico, 1998. Photograph by Audrey Wang

0:00

0:00


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

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.