Gabriel Chaile
Aguas calientes
For the project Aguas calientes Gabriel Chaile exchanged silverware from three popular soup kitchens (mutual aid organizations to provide food for people in need) in Buenos Aires to brand new cooking utensils to shape his project. Chaile then reworks the used goods, welding and engraving the names of their sites of provenance and imagery from local indigenous community’s visual repertoire; faces from vessels and iconography present in Cultura Tafí, Condorhuasi, Alamito, Santa María, Candelaria, and Ciénaga. Through this operation, he translates the idea of the “communal pot” into a meeting point for mutual cooperation and political resistance.
In this project, Chaile reveals how everyday objects are imbibed in social and political relations, and their use and context mark their surfaces. The pans and pots used in the project are from the late 90s, having fed hordes of people during Argentina’s most challenging economic crisis. By devising new uses for items that once had a clear purpose, Chaile reprograms its fate and somehow retrieves, through those specifically used utensils, magical properties of pre-Columbian vessels. Simultaneously, the artist calls into question an entire system of power relations established by the “official” narratives and its classist progression, against which the pot and its form stand. The project was first shown in 2019’s edition of Art Basel, where the artist was present offering cups of mate cocido infusion (a popular Argentinian drink) every day at 5pm, in a subtle irony to English tea-time.