TEARS ON A COFFIN – New York

A performative Neon Text and 1978 Cadillac Hearse installation in the Public Sphere by Anne Katrine Senstad

Photo by Stefano Giovannini

TEARS ON A COFFIN, 2013, by Anne Katrine Senstad. A site specific-performative, neon text, Cadillac Hearse installation. Curated by Sarah Crown Gallery for No Longer Empty.

TEARS ON A COFFIN short film excerpt with a score by Senstad and acclaimed Norwegian composer and musician Ulf Knudsen

Tears on a Coffin, 2013 by Anne Katrine Senstad

Curatorial text from the origin of the project in Mexico city in 2012 by Sandra Cerisola, Mexico city

Tears on a Coffin is a site specific performative work that was originally planned to take place in Mexico City. It was however conceived as a traveling piece, adapting to a local environment, in this occasion in NYC. 
The main focus of the artwork consists of Anne Katrine Senstad’s white Neon sentence – ‘Tears on a Coffin’, simulating the artist’s handwriting and mounted on the roof of a funeral car, referencing advertisement aesthetic in the public realm. The funeral car would circulate through key areas of Mexico City while being filmed, establishing a dialogue with a national context; political, social-economical and historical. 

The routes and performances would reference the national political panorama during the last presidential election in Mexico. The first route was planned to pass symbolic national monuments. The performative character of the piece, would have added an aspect of spatial-temporal precision, reactivating representational sites and buildings of Mexican history. Here, the work suggests the ‘death’ of political utopias – ranging from colonial to modern – in direct relation to the city as fluctuating and in motion.

The second route was planned in the area of Santa Fe; a relatively new urban area containing headquarters of multinational corporations, a huge exclusive shopping mall, upper social-economical residential areas and a private university, all built on the remains of a large garbage dump where extreme poverty continues to co-exist in radical contrast. For this route a traditional rural orchestra was to play in procession following the funeral car. These bands are used for poor people’s funerals in rural Mexico. The songs are simple and rough (usually out of tune).

At this stage Tears on a Coffin, was intended to involve a transgressive act in a sterile environment. Spontaneous reactions of people would have been part of the piece, both as regular passerby’s and as participants in the procession. This performance, was meant to stress the existent contrast between two Mexican post-colonial realities represented in the video by the city garbage dump inhabitants, both old and new, and the band with the the new urban opulent development as background.

The visual hyperbole of the neon on the large black funeral car circulating, is ironically suggestive of the evident phenomena in Mexico in this case, where it has been historically common that people react with a closed eye to the abuse of power.

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