Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati

YO NO SÉ SI TENGA AMOR LA ETERNIDAD PERO ALLÁ, TAL COMO AQUÍ EN LA BOCA ILEVARÁS SABOR A MÍ

Sofía Salazar Rosales

Alice Amati

17 April - 25 May, 2024

What if walls could talk? Share their stories, what they’ve seen, felt; the memories they hold, like echoes, rippling  through our everyday life and person. Omniscient, they know. They are like ghosts, or ‘fantasmas’, in Spanish. This  translation into English is not quite a complete one, though; a ‘fantasma’ is something between the amorphous, both  sentimental and symbolic. Charged with a particular energy, they inhabit the worlds of nostalgia, yearning, respect  and wonder. 

Sofía Salazar Rosales’ (b. 1999, Ecuador) practice speaks to said ‘fantasmas’. Drawing from the languages of  sculpture, installation and architecture, Salazar Rosales’ responses are part of the spaces they inhabit. Crossing  mediums, they defy pigeon-holed categorisation, extending and unraveling unseen and unsung details of the world  around us. Rather than existing as completely new works, they are each reformulations of past ones, as if they were  an ongoing story. Akin to the patina on walls, they accumulate, morph, change. 

There are certain recurring motifs, though: how they slump, droop, hang, titter, tense; are pulled by gravity and also  defy it. In their materiality, Salazar Rosales embraces a balance between tenderness and precarity with a leaning  towards what is made by hand: glass, beads, stitching, casts. In each assemblage there is a systemic delicacy and  unique levity morphed with a whispered monumentality that feeds into fuelling them with their own charge. Look  closely and you’ll note little details; a seed, a talisman, a personification of each creation in its current formulation. 

The analogy to ‘fantasmas’ is one that came to Salazar Rosales on a plane. Originally from Ecuador and Cuba, she  moved to Europe for her studies, first France - Lyon and Paris - now Holland. In a moment of movement,  displacement, there was a thought for what is left, and what is retained. Like what one tastes after a meal or a bite,  or the sound that is recalled after hearing a song. Indeed, the title of the exhibition takes its cue from ‘Sabor A Mi’  by Álvaro Carillo Alarcón, which is a ‘bolero’, a quintessential South American genre that croons and is associated  with a past time. Slow and romantic, heavy with desire, they soften the realities of our present day and unveil the  glowing haze of memory. 

Unlike a ‘fantasma’ though, which is a masculine term with the pronoun ‘un’, Salazar Rosales refers to her works  as ‘ellas’, the plural for she. In their femininity, they resemble ‘una cancion’ (song) or ‘una memoria’ (memory),  existing in this realm of sisterly kinship. Released into the world and particularly into a space with precise intention,  there is a pervading sense of protecting. When peering closely at ‘When the axial skeleton decides to speak’ (2024),  for example, you may notice a hanging seed; a talismanic bulls eye or ‘ojo de buey’ that speaks to Salazar Rosales’  Cuban heritage and the Santería belief system. 

There is also the aspect of holding; literally, conceptually and emotionally providing support. For example, ‘We are  contextual and sentimental & Meeting space(s)’ (2024) that Salazar Rosales refers to as ‘dos enamorados’, which  translates as two lovers, involves two leaning bags atop a mat. There is also ‘They ask to stay’ (2024) in which cast  plantain bananas hang in a beaded mesh bag, stitched assiduously by Salazar Rosales’ hand. Beyond their held  drop, there is a considered conversation around them as an agricultural product, one that has been at the heart of  so much control, market manipulation and inequality in Ecuador and other parts of Latin America. A tackling of the  economics and imbalance of source versus consumption. 

Ultimately though, Salazar Rosales’ work dances. It introduces each element with a faint sense of play, as if a song  were playing in the distance and you could be overheard humming, softly. Like a poem, ‘Sabor A Mi’ resembles a  string of words, sentences and punctuations written to a past time yet existing in a present moment for us to absorb.  A note from a former self, place, lover, that one is to keep for our future selves. Text by Jennifer Ellis 

Sofía Salazar Rosales (b. 1999, Ecuador) lives and works between Paris, France and Quito, Ecuador. She is currently studying towards a master’s degree at the School of Fine Arts (ENSBA Paris) in the ateliers of Tatiana Trouvé, Petrit Halilaj and Alvaro Urbano. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree with distinction from School of Fine Arts of Lyon (ENSBA Lyon) where she worked in the studios of Pauline Bastard and Niek Van de Steeg. Recent exhibitions and fairs include: ‘Paris Internationale’, Chertlüdde Booth 2.15, Paris, (2023); ‘ARCOmadrid 2023’, ChertLüdde Booth 9B15, Madrid (2023); ‘Pays rêvé, pays revers’, Petite Galerie – Cité internationale des arts, Paris, (2023); ‘Mantengo la urgencia de reconciliar (Holding the urge to reconcile)’, juniin, Guayaquil, (2022); ‘Réfectoire des nonnes’, École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Lyon, Lyon, (2022); ‘Piel de Serpiente’, Shmorévaz, Paris, (2022); ‘Flash Point’, Ponce+Rebobles, Madrid, (2021-2022); ‘Degree Show’, École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Lyon, Lyon, (2021).

Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery
Installation view, Sofía Salazar Rosales at Alice Amati, 2024, London, Courtesy of the artist and the gallery