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Fallen Fruit Banana Meditation & Artists Talk
20 September 2009 12 PM
Part of LACE Salon Series with Fallen Fruit
Fallen Fruit members David Burns, Matias Viegener and Austin Young discuss the research behind United Fruit along with their ongoing project, The Colonial History of Fruit. The collective talk about the focus of their work with the locals and the way this initiative combines the particular history with the global reality of fruit. The salon will begin at noon with a meditation leading participants through a range of concepts related to the banana, followed by a discussion at 1pm led by the artists.
FALLEN FRUIT: UNITED FRUIT
Currently on view at LACE, United Fruit
premieres a new body of work generated during Fallen Fruit's recent
residency in Colombia, South America which features a series of
photographs and video installations exploring the social, political and
pop history of the banana. As the most popular fruit in the world, the
banana is ubiquitous in daily life -- both as a food staple in grocery
stores large and small as well as the supremely seductive fruit used in
modern advertising and branding. At the same time the banana’s
history, politics and origins have remained virtually invisible due to
the remoteness of where they are grown and of the people who grow them.
Fallen Fruit's installation at LACE engages its subject in a
range of bold and oblique strategies, signaling perhaps that no single
history of the banana is possible. The title for the exhibition,
United Fruit comes from the United Fruit Company which exists today in
a much reduced form as Chiquita Bananas. More powerful than the Latin
American countries it colonized, the corporation was marked by its
ruthlessness and corruption, and its exploitation of workers, a
turbulent history of protests and events that led to the infamous
Banana Massacre of 1928 near the town of Ciénega, Colombia, which
Fallen Fruit visited to create this work. Burns, Viegener and Young
chose to retain the title United Fruit for its hopeful and utopian
echo, a contrast to its actual history.
The banana is a cultural
symbol that has a powerful history of marketing and manipulation. In
addition to its examination of the social and political history of the
banana, United Fruit also examines the playful place of the banana in
pop culture as the central prop in suggestive jokes and naughty humor.
As much as there is a prohibition against stating the obvious, the
force of the banana as a phallic symbol cannot be ignored.
The projects included in the United Fruit
exhibition are part of a new long-term work-in-progress entitled The
Colonial History of Fruit, which juxtaposes two kinds of history: the
broad or "objective" and the anecdotal or "subjective." The next fruits
to be examined are the kiwi and arctic berries.
ABOUT FALLEN FRUIT
Fallen
Fruit is a collaboration between David Burns, Matias Viegener, and
Austin Young. Founded in 2004, their projects range from social
practice (events, performances and public actions) to photography,
video and installations. Fallen Fruit deploys fruit in their work to
examine social relationships, the environment, urban space and
transnational capitalism. Fruit in this sense is transhistorical and
crosses all classes, ages and ethnic groups. It is both ubiquitous and
often invisible, yet it is also the food that appears most often in
art. All of Fallen Fruit’s projects touch on, work through or work with
fruit in some manner. They state that “fruit is the lens through which
we look at the world.”
www.fallenfruit.org
Check out other Salon Series Events with Fallen Fruit.
