Ñandutí: Indigenous and Modern Artworks of Paraguay

Ñandutí: Indigenous and Modern Artworks of Paraguay
Untitled, 2020
Ballpoint pen on paper
21.5 x 28.5 cm (8.5 x 11.2 in)
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Floriberta Fermin Avalos (1988-) was born in Campo Alegre-Chaco, and is part of a Nivacle community. Her drawings are distinguished by a background textural pattern, which similarly to Angélica Klassen, recalls the fibre of textiles. In the work presented here, wild pigs are gathered under a big-bellied bottle tree (Ceiba chodatii), a species of particular significance for Nivacle communities. With its ample foliage, the bottle tree provides shade for animals in the forests. Its trunk, frequently riddled with cavities, is known for hosting beehives. Its wood used to be used for canoes and for the containers of fermented drinks, as well as ritual masks.

Today, the territory of El Chaco has been radically altered. The destruction of forests has jeopardised the subsistence practices that indigenous communities depended on. Industrialization has caused the expulsion of communities from their lands, and a relentless processes of sedentarization, motivated by the need for low-wage labour in factories and farms.

ee a documentary about the now derelict tannin factory in Puerto Casado by anthropologist Valentina Bonifacio.

... read more
Untitled, 2020 | Ballpoint pen on paper 28.5 x 21.5 cm

Floriberta Fermin Avalos (1988-) was born in Campo Alegre-Chaco, and is part of a Nivacle community. Her drawings are distinguished by a background textural pattern, which similarly to Angélica Klassen, recalls the fibre of textiles. In the work presented here, wild pigs are gathered under a big-bellied bottle tree (Ceiba chodatii), a species of particular significance for Nivacle communities. With its ample foliage, the bottle tree provides shade for animals in the forests. Its trunk, frequently riddled with cavities, is known for hosting beehives. Its wood used to be used for canoes and for the containers of fermented drinks, as well as ritual masks.

Today, the territory of El Chaco has been radically altered. The destruction of forests has jeopardised the subsistence practices that indigenous communities depended on. Industrialization has caused the expulsion of communities from their lands, and a relentless processes of sedentarization, motivated by the need for low-wage labour in factories and farms.

ee a documentary about the now derelict tannin factory in Puerto Casado by anthropologist Valentina Bonifacio.

... read more