
Alinka Echeverria b. 1981
Rebel. Becoming South Sudan: Chapter I, 2011
c type print on archival photographic paper, mounted on archival museum board in hand stained hardwood frame
75 x 75 cm
29 4/8 x 29 4/8 ins
29 4/8 x 29 4/8 ins
1/3 + 2APs
In Becoming South Sudan, Echeverría turns to a different form of representation by exploring the act of wearing as a mode of becoming, self-determination and self-reflection. Through powerful, sometimes confrontational...
In Becoming South Sudan, Echeverría turns to a different form of representation by exploring the act of wearing as a mode of becoming, self-determination and self-reflection. Through powerful, sometimes confrontational portraits, Echeverría captures the gaze of individuals at a pivotal time in 2011, when the Republic of South Sudan finally gained Independence after decades of war. Interested in the historical moment of the birth of a country, the artist explored the representational constructs of what it meant to suddenly become a Nation State and unite sixty-nine tribes under a national ethos.