Joiri Minaya
My work is a reassertion of Self, an exercise of unlearning, decolonizing and exorcizing imposed histories, cultures and ideas. Challenging both Global North’s capitalist imperialist narrative and Global South’s nationalist patriarchal rhetoric, it counters dangerous equations of women and nature centered in desire and consumption, control and conquest.
The “Tropical,” constructed by colonial desires historically, is now a kind of universal ready-made: decorative, interchangeable, disposable, branding “authenticity” and freshness. Inter-disciplinarily, I explore the performativity of tropical identity as product: entertainment, distraction, pleasure, paradise, fantasy, leisure, service, and the laboring body that maintains it all.
I look back at the Gaze othering me, consuming not only body but also culture, by seeming to fulfill, but instead sabotaging its expectations. I find power in an embodiment that evidences the viewer’s complicity in the construction. I craft the complex, multi-layered, expansive and humanized experience I crave from within this reclaimed position. I internalize, then bring this gaze back out, re-performed, re-arranged, deconstructed, self-evident.
My work is rooted in performance, collage and pattern design, but combines a variety of other mediums and crafts. Recent works (printmaking, transparencies, perforated vinyl, fabric-covered bodies) use opacity and refusal as shelter from demands of hyper-visibility and control.