Artes Mundi, a UK-based art organization, has given the 11th Artes Mundi Award to Peruvian artist Antonio Paucar. He will receive £40,000 towards his performance, sculpture, and video practice, which draws on Andean culture and his Peruvian heritage.
The ceremony was held at Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum in Cardiff on January 15. In an interview with the Art Newspaper, Paucar said he intends to use the funds to convert his family’s home in the central highlands of Peru into a combined museum and art school.
“Over the last few years, I began restoring the abandoned adobe house of my grandparents. It is important to me to safeguard the house and workshop of my ancestors,” he said, adding, “It seems equally appropriate to me that this space be transformed into a small, independent art school, given that the nearest and largest city, Huancayo, does not have an art school nor a museum of art.”
Work by the six international artists shortlisted for the prize will be shown in a group exhibition at Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum Cardiff through March 1. Each artist will also receive a solo presentation at four of the organization’s partner venues: Mostyn in Llandudno; Aberystwyth Arts Centre; Glynn Vivian Art Gallery in Swansea; and Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff.
A former beekeeper in Peru, Paucar later studied at the Universität der Künste Berlin. His exhibition at Artes Mundi in Cardiff includes the film El Corazon de la Montaña (2018-2019), which addresses ecological damage in the Huaytapallana mountain range.
“Nature and the ecosystem there are being destroyed by mining,” Paucar told AN. Asked whether he considers himself an activist, he added: “I’m more of an artist—though I’m often labeled an activist because I belong to an Indigenous group.”
Paucar also wrote a sentence in his native language, Wanka Limay (also known as Quechua Wanka), using his own blood as ink. The text, displayed alongside the film, translates as: “The heart of the sacred mountains is weeping blood.”
