arquivo mangue
o que diriam as pedras a marte?
o que diriam as pedras a marte? [What would the stones say to Mars?] is a sculptural work consisting of two parts by Arquivo Mangue. On the ground is a square-size steel board—much like a game board—that holds various objects (glass bottle, watch, shards of building tiles, discarded piece of metal marked “failed business femur”) and emits a faint sound of water that recalls the river that once flowed near the site of Pivô in São Paulo before urbanization took hold. Above the “game board” hovers a circular suspending structure – like an upside-down parachute – that casts an amber glow. The river sound and the game board point to the speculation of the socioeconomic model in which we live and the ravages it wrecks on us, while the suspended piece—a rust-infected canvas fabric—looks like a planet, mounted across it an inscription in iron: ia uma ética mineral [there was a mineral ethics].
The planet Mars has experienced an accelerated process of colonization by the human species, whose way of thinking continues to be based on a unilateral and abusive relationship that when things cease to be ‘functional’, we move to another place to exploit, tirelessly repeating this dynamic of extraction and exhaustion. For Arquivo Mangue, sculpture is a kind of fiction, and this ambitious work points to the urgency of building a mineral ethic that begins with interspecific relationships as the center of all imagination, cosmogony, and planetary habitation. It is an ethics that emerges from the awareness of the ephemeral, that produces a harmony between the situation and the moment and which generates a reciprocal relationship, as bringing together the two disparate objects forming planetary relations. The work is also an urgent call, as the text on a piece of frayed cotton reads: “Exterminate the bandeirante before Mars turns into a ditch.” Bandeirante references the “flag-carriers” and “explorers” of the land in the early Colonial period of Brazil, thus linking the legacies of colonialization of Mars to that of present-day Brazil.