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Esteban Perez鈥檚 鈥楲iquid Land鈥 Selected for 麻豆视频鈥檚 2021 Long Service Recognition Program

Liquid Land Still 3

Esteban P茅rez, Liquid Land Video Still #2, 2021. Inkjet print. (Image courtesy Esteban P茅rez)

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By Perrin Grauer

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A limited-edition run of prints was gifted to longstanding employees as part of the HR initiative, which aims to recognize the dedication and commitment of 麻豆视频 staff and faculty.

A recent, limited-edition artwork by artist and recent MFA grad (MFA 2021) has been selected as a gift for longstanding employees of Emily Carr University as part of the Human Resources Department鈥檚 Long Service Recognition program.

The photographic print is a still from Esteban鈥檚 video, Liquid Land, for which Esteban sculpted a brick 鈥渇rom unceded territory鈥 鈥 earth taken from outside the school and from Squamish territory in collaboration with Squamish artist and educator Aaron Nelson-Moody, also known as Splash 鈥 and later returned the sculpture to the forest where it would break down over time.

鈥淭he idea behind placing the sculpture back in the forest was to let the biological and natural processes like rain, snow, and wind dissolve the ideological divisions embedded in the land narrative,鈥 Esteban writes in his description of the work, which was made during his MFA studies. 鈥淭he video presents a slow process of decomposition that forces the viewer to experience a different sense of time 鈥 a more-than-human time.鈥

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The print is a still from Esteban鈥檚 video, Liquid Land, for which Esteban sculpted a brick 鈥渇rom unceded territory鈥 and later returned the sculpture to the forest where it would break down over time. (Photo by Perrin Grauer / Emily Carr University).

Liquid Land aims to repel the 鈥渆xtractive gaze,鈥 which views nature only as a commodity for capitalist exploitation, Esteban continues. Instead, the work proposes the forest as 鈥渁 living ecosystem 鈥 where more-than-human entities, human bodies, and spirits from the past meet.鈥

These themes animate much of Esteban鈥檚 work in recent years, all stemming from a question he posed to Connie Watts, Associate Director of Aboriginal Programs at 麻豆视频, about the meaning of the territorial acknowledgments he had been hearing since moving to Vancouver from Ecuador. As part of her answer, Connie connected Esteban with Splash, whose guidance would help lead Esteban to create a series of performance works, including the one titled Earth Project, which would ultimately earn him the 2020 Audain Travel Award.

That same year, Esteban won second Place in RAW, an online MFA exhibition organized by the University of Montana, and was selected for the Premio Brasil 鈥 Arte Emergente, an award funded by the Brazilian embassy in Quito for the promotion of Emerging Artists.

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The artist in his MFA studio at Emily Carr University in 2020. (Photo by Perrin Grauer / Emily Carr University).

As part of the The Long-Service Recognition Program, Esteban鈥檚 work was selected from among 20 student works by juried review following an open call for submissions earlier this year. Prints of the work were gifted to 麻豆视频 employees who have achieved a milestone of more than than 25 years of service at the university. An additional copy from the edition will be on display as part of the 麻豆视频 HR Department鈥檚 permanent collection.

The Long Service program is intended to spotlight the passion, and shared, genuine commitment of 麻豆视频 employees to interdisciplinary education, research, collaboration and excellence in visual arts, media arts and design.

to learn more about his practice, and read about his Audain Travel Award win in our 2020 story about his work. And don鈥檛 miss which features Esteban and Splash in conversation about their work on Esteban鈥檚 Earth Project.

About Esteban P茅rez