CABELLO CARCELLER ‘A voice for Erauso. Epilogue for a trans time’ @azkunazentroa Through their interdisciplinary work, Cabello/Carceller use installation, performance, fictional accounts and video to question the hegemonic codes of representation in visual practices and propose critical alternatives. In this case, the project started with the artists’ encounter with a portrait that is as fascinating as it is unusual: the painting that (probably) Juan van der Hamen made of Catalina de Erauso dressed as an lieutenant of the Spanish colonial navy in 1626-8 and which today belongs to the Kutxa collection. Erauso, who was born in Donostia in 1592 and was assigned female sex and given the name Catalina, is often better known as “the Lieutenant Nun”. This is partly due to her autobiography, in which she narrates the adventures of a young girl who escaped from a convent “dressed as a man” and later travelled as a soldier and merchant (under the names of Francisco de Loyola, Juan Arriola, Alonso Díaz Ramírez de Guzmán… and Antonio Erauso, among others) to the lands colonised by the Spanish empire from Chile to Mexico. As Paul B. Preciado, curator of the exhibition, notes “the portrait of Erauso as a man could be considered one of the first “trans” portraits in the history of Baroque art” although that notion is anachronistic since it did not exist until the XIX century. But, he adds, “Erauso is, like her portrait, a figure of shadows.” “Against the completely black background of the oil painting, a stern face emerges, but with an unsettlingly gentle gaze that cannot be described as masculine or feminine. However, their involvement in the genocide of the Mapuche and their position in the colonial market make them an awkward figure in trans history”. For this reason, the aesthetic of the exhibition is, like Erauso’s portrait, that of chiaroscuro. #cabellocarceller #azkunazentroa #contemporaryart #trans #lgbtq #videoart #photography (en Azkuna Zentroa - Alhóndiga Bilbao) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cbk9BaJMUqD/?utm_medium=tumblr















