Working with photography, video, drawing, sculpture or installation, Juan Fernando Herrán’s (b.1963, Bogotá) practice is conceptual and analytical, informed by extensive research. Exploring issues of economic and political control in his native Colombia, he collates visual material and other contextual data – information that invariably reveals complex and at times contradictory relationships between government, the authorities, crime and the economy.
‘The poppies are in the field, but don’t ask me what that means,’ sang Julian Cope at the height of Liverpool’s psychedelically-tinged new wave of music in 1980. It was the start of a decade that would see hard drugs flood the UK, and Merseyside, like many urban areas, provided a ready market for the opiates on offer. To what, we may ask, did the poppy fields in Juan Fernando Herrán’s installation for International 02, Terra Incognita (2000-02), refer?
In it, the conditions of Colombia’s rural opium-producing areas were reflected in miniature tableaux, perched atop a series of small boulders scattered across the floor. Sited on terra firma at Tate Liverpool – once an impregnable warehouse used to store goods of Empire – what connections did this work suggest between the illicit trade in narcotics from South America and the port of Liverpool? What significance did Herrán’s rocky outcrops now contain, here in their dockside setting?
Working with photography, video, drawing, sculpture or installation, Herrán’s practice is conceptual and analytical, informed by extensive research. Exploring issues of economic and political control in his native Colombia, he collates visual material and other contextual data –information that invariably reveals complex and at times contradictory relationships between government, the authorities, crime and the economy.Terra Incognita (2000-02) was based on a series of aerial intelligence photographs acquired from Colombian police records. Surveillance images of this kind are used to locate and then eradicate poppy plantations as part of the state’s war on drugs.
Herrán’s interest in these images was twofold: firstly, in how they offer a partial and fragmentary reality – one that barely represents the life of the rural workers – ‘these isolated locations only exist and become noticeable because of their illegal crops’; and secondly, the way they conceal the global forces that have driven these farmers to dangerous, desperate means in order to survive.
At the start of the 1990s, the price of coffee fell dramatically as the US-driven open market policy replaced the fixed shares system that previously existed between coffee producing nations. The subsequent decline in Colombia’s main export income compelled many farmers to replace coffee with the opium poppy. Herrán recognised that the ‘remoteness in mental and geographical terms’ of these farmers was a direct consequence of unbridled free trade. He pointed to the nineteenth-century Opium Wars between China and England and other European nations as a pertinent reference point for any historical examination of how economic imperatives drove first imperial ambitions, and now the process of globalisation.
Terra incognita, 2000-02
Installation
Courtesy of artist and partly commissioned by Liverpool Biennial 2002
Exhibited at Tate Liverpool
Liverpool Biennial
55 New Bird Street
Liverpool L1 0BW
Liverpool Biennial is funded by
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