{"id":43404,"date":"2026-01-20T01:13:26","date_gmt":"2026-01-20T07:13:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/themesh.art\/?post_type=eventos&#038;p=43404"},"modified":"2026-01-20T01:13:26","modified_gmt":"2026-01-20T07:13:26","slug":"carmen-neely-a-trace-beyond-the-life-of-the-body","status":"publish","type":"eventos","link":"https:\/\/themesh.art\/en\/eventos\/carmen-neely-a-trace-beyond-the-life-of-the-body\/","title":{"rendered":"Carmen Neely:\u00a0a trace beyond the life of the body"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1><\/h1>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">2 February &#8211; 2 May 2026<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/marianeibrahim.com\/contact\/\">Mexico City<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n<p>Carmen Neely, never as opaque as you imagine, 2025. Detail. Courtesy of the artist and Mariane Ibrahim.<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Mariane Ibrahim is pleased to present a solo exhibition with Carmen Neely entitled,\u00a0<\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\">a trace beyond the life of the body<\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\">, in Mexico City. Marking the artist\u2019s first solo presentation in Latin America and her third with the gallery, the exhibition unfolds at a focal moment in Neely\u2019s practice, as she now divides her time between Chicago and Mexico City.\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Intimately connected to writing, Neely\u2019s painting\u00a0emerges\u00a0as a form of inscription: one that unfolds on canvases prepared with a transparent primer or, for the first time in this exhibition, with a light beige ground that recalls the raw canvas she has long\u00a0favoured.\u00a0This subtle chromatic shift acts as a conceptual threshold: neither blank nor fully neutral, the surface becomes a site where change is tensely negotiated.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">A conscious witness to the political realities shaping the world, Neely understands the present as a moment in which history is not simply narrated, but actively rewritten through erasure, strategic concealment, and intentional distortion. While political power has always\u00a0sought\u00a0to shape collective memory, the scale and clarity with which this is occurring today has deeply affected the artist\u2019s way of seeing.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">These concerns materialize through a plastic gesture introduced in this exhibition: the use of masking tape as a compositional tool. Applied between layers of paint, the tape is successively removed to reveal negative spaces that recall the blacked-out lines of censored texts or classified documents. Yet here, the space is not erased into silence; it\u00a0remains\u00a0visibly marked, overwritten. What is left behind is evidence of intervention. The canvas becomes a field where the struggle for stability and narrative cohesion unfolds within an abstract language that\u00a0remains\u00a0acutely responsive to the world.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"none\">Carmen Neely\u2019s personal engagement with the construction of history resonates with the work of artists and thinkers such as\u00a0Christina Sharpe, who has theorized and employed black redaction as a form of protection and refusal in both visual and textual practices. In her research, Sharpe has obscured portions of archival photographs of enslaved women\u2014often leaving visible only a narrow band of their eyes\u2014in order to\u00a0resist the re-victimization that\u00a0accompanies\u00a0the circulation of images originally produced to enact violence on Black bodies. Through strategic omission and transformation, Sharpe reclaims agency, redirecting attention away from what is explicitly represented and toward what exceeds the frame, opening space for alternative modes of reading and seeing.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"none\">A similar reclaiming of redaction as an active, generative gesture can be found in contemporary poetry. Writers such as\u00a0Quenton Baker\u00a0and\u00a0Nicole Sealey\u00a0treat historical documents as sites of intervention, extracting submerged narratives from official records. In\u00a0<\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"none\">we pilot the blood<\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"none\"><em>,<\/em>\u00a0Baker obscures and rearranges language drawn from U.S. Senate documents describing the 1841 rebellion aboard the ship\u00a0<\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"none\">Creole<\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"none\">, a revolt that led to the escape of most of the enslaved people on board. Sealey, in\u00a0<\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"none\">The Ferguson Report: An Erasure<\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"none\"><em>,<\/em>\u00a0appropriates and redacts police reports related to the 2014 murder of Michael Brown, transforming bureaucratic language into a space for mourning, resistance, and historical reckoning. In both cases, redaction becomes not an act of removal, but one of revelation, allowing suppressed histories to surface through absence.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The works presented in Carmen Neely\u2019s\u00a0<\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\">a trace beyond the life of the body<\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\">\u00a0arise from what the artist describes as an unanswerable question: how to uphold memory while also upholding truth. Vibrant traces and calligraphic lines negotiate continuously with negative space through gestures that\u00a0remain\u00a0intuitive. The traces of erasure do not simply leave voids; they register blocked information, subtle disruptions that insist on being seen. Through acts of addition and subtraction, Neely emphasizes the necessity of negative space, not as absence, but as a marker of what is missing.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Alongside the canvases, the exhibition includes a series of drawings on paper, where similar tensions are explored on a more intimate scale. Here, intensity and confusion are distilled into a quieter register, allowing the viewer to\u00a0encounter\u00a0the instability of language and memory in closer proximity.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"none\">At the start of the exhibition, the artist will\u00a0initiate\u00a0an action that will continue throughout its duration, marking time through a process of writing and accumulation. In the upper gallery, two archival drawers will serve as open receptacles for an expanding body of\u00a0papers:\u00a0notes and drawings that Neely will sit down to produce each week. Though visibly present, these papers will remain secured in\u00a0place,\u00a0their contents inaccessible, gradually buried as the exercise unfolds. Always\u00a0contained, they become intangible evidence of obscured gestures.\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">If, as Susan Stewart writes, \u201cspeech leaves no mark in space,\u201d while writing \u201cleaves its trace, a trace beyond the life of the body,\u201d Neely\u2019s practice aligns painting with this contaminated, persistent form of inscription. Each layer, interruption, and negative space\u00a0operates\u00a0as a rebellious, uncontrollable trace: an embodied writing that\u00a0remains, even as histories are transformed.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">&#8220;Speech leaves no mark in space; like gesture it exists in its immediate context and can reappear only in another\u2019s voice, another\u2019s body, even if that other is the same speaker transformed by history. But writing contaminates; writing leaves its trace, a trace beyond the life of the body. Thus, while speech gains authenticity, writing promises immortality, or at least the immortality of the material world in contrast to the mortality of the body. Our terror of the unmarked grave is the terror of insignificance of a world without writing. The metaphor of the unmarked grave is one which joins the mute and the ambivalent; without the mark there is no boundary, no point at which to begin the repetition. Writing gives us a device for inscribing space, for inscribing nature: the lovers&#8217; names carved in bark, the slogans on the bridge, and the strangely uniform and idiosyncratic hand that has tattooed the subways. Writing serves to capture the world, defining and commenting upon the configurations we choose to textualize. If writing is an imitation of speech, it is also a \u201cscript,\u201d as a marking of speech in space which can be taken up through time in varying contexts.\u00a0\u00a0The space between letters, the space between words, bears no hesitations of the body; it has only the hesitations of knowing, the hesitations which arise from its place outside history &#8211; transcendent yet lacking the substantiating power of context &#8221;\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Susan Stewart,\u202f<\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\">On Longing<\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\">. Duke University Press, 1993. p. 31<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>2 February &#8211; 2 May 2026 Mexico City Carmen Neely, never as opaque as you imagine, 2025. Detail. 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