política de las
formas
an exhibition by Voluspa Jarpa 14.SEPT.2024 — 23.NOV.2024
Drawn by the massive declassification that took place in the United States during Bill Clinton's administration, Jarpa was struck by its material condition. That is to say, the artist became concerned about the overwhelming presence of crossed out sections. Blacked out to veil those compromising contents that remain hidden despite their declassification. That which may never come to light, that which remains classified. Jarpa states: "I suffered a second shock because many of these documents were blacked out - entire paragraphs and pages erased with black lines and blocks. I was moved by this erased information and, in turn, by the history of Chile, which I felt, through that erasure, as small and insignificant”. The artist begins her enquiry by evidencing the irreversible process of archival expurgation. However, despite the fact that her work begins and is even sustained by the violence of what has been crossed out, of what has been banned, of what has not been shown and, therefore, of what has been cut out of history; what she really emphasises is that this same crossed-out material, to which we may never have access, is capable of recovering its decidability despite being marked with the sign of the unspeakable; its legibility despite being stigmatised with the sign of the illegible; its affirmative condition despite being cut off with the sign of the crossed-out. It is as if that which censures justice and truth were turned against the perpetrators and were the only evidence, not only of censorship itself- of the violence to which bodies and documents have been subjected - but of the opacity with which, paradoxically, the past can be better read and, I would say, better written. The artist reveals the most complex dimensions and the scope of the obscure gaps in history.
For Voluspa Jarpa's work exercises a blacking out pedagogy. Those crossed-out sections that - by standing out from the revealed text, by becoming a clear image - manage to expose the connections and practices that are inscribed in the document, no longer as a mere obstacle or contingency, but as a fundamental part of the history it encompasses. By becoming legible images, these opaque geometries discontinue the external condition of what is crossed out, that is to say, they become intrinsic to every document and, of course, to every archive.
Rather, I propose that Jarpa's work suggests that these blacked out sections go far beyond secrecy, surveillance and the restriction of access to compromising information: they are able to account for how the state of exception is structured, how the fabric of history is told, how permission to narrate is exercised, as Edward Said conceived it, and furthermore, how the archive is made up, not just the one dressed in black, but all archives. The blacked out sections, then, record necessary clues to programme the assemblage that the archive requires, to come closer to producing the proscribed narrative of our difficult history.
And this account of the opacity of this archive leads the artist to discuss the art field of the 1960s and 1970s, which was dominated by American Minimalism. Minimalism and the intervention of the United States in Chile seem to be associated, then, to what I call here the politics of form. We may consider that this work threads geometric abstractionism and monochrome with the atrocious document, which in principle share temporality, appear simultaneously. Jarpa's work activates the political relations that pass through the form between the work of artists such as Frank Stella or Donald Judd and declassified documents. Formal coincidences between minimalist art and the declassified document suggest a continuity between aesthetics and politics, and emphasise an association that can only be detected when understood as a politics of form. That is, form reveals the epochal complicity between aesthetics and US imperial policies of the 1960s and 1970s.
Likewise, such correspondence also reveals the ability of Jarpa's work to find in the blacked out sections of the declassified - in the transformation that the censorial contingency finally makes possible, that is, in the way in which information becomes image - a matter that is legible beyond its pure condition of erasure, its formulation as an accident of history. Because the Chilean artist refuses to invite us to decipher that which lies beneath what has been blacked out, or even to speculate on what might lie there, but rather to situate a new opaque alphabet whose opacity allows us to read that which the documents unlawfully hold but also what they exceed. The blacked out sections are even more eloquent, they are capable of revealing much more than the naked document itself.
And to account for the fact that these blacked out sections, which reveal as well as conceal, that they are confronted with the productive relations that made their condition of matter possible: I am referring to the production devices of these same documents. With her assemblages, Voluspa Jarpa proposes to penetrate the matters responsible for her writing. When she tackles the declassified documents of the Cold War, the artist reaches into the deepest corners of the typewriters that possibly produced the now declassified documents in order to try to read - on their time-worn keys, on their crumpled types and rollers - that which they printed at a distant time, that which is still embedded and jammed in the devices for producing documents. For example, in the piece Artilugio Historia (Device History) the artist intercepts three materials: declassified documents, burnt books and a metal stamp with steel types from an analogue printing press that does not compose intelligible words. This assemblage that transforms the destructive and obstructive function of history - the censorship of documents, the burning of books typical of totalitarian reason and the intervention and closure of printing presses - becomes a device for the production of meaning that manages to evade that which obstructs it and then presents itself as a novel war machine .
Voluspa Jarpa's impressive work makes it possible to expose the ways in which obstruction, destruction and censorship become productive and constitute not only the repressive apparatus of the state but also the architecture that manages its memory. The blacked out sections of the declassified document become a foundational exercise in investigating the most radical political events: from the assassination plots against political leaders in Latin America or the surveillance of post-structuralist intellectuals during the Cold War, to the Chilean outbreak of 2019 and the ocular trauma of an entire country. Ultimately, Voluspa Jarpa makes the crossed-out document, which will later become the crossed-out eye of the Chilean protests, the legible principle of her highly complex politics of form.
Text by Javier Guerrero