Gala Porras-Kim, 254 offerings for the rain at the Peabody Museum (details), 2021 © Gala Porras-Kim

The Fowler Museum at UCLA presents The weight of a patina of time, a series of works by artist Gala Porras-Kim (b. 1984, Bogotá, Colombia; lives and works in Los Angeles and London). Porras-Kim’s research-based practice looks closely at the layered meaning of objects in the 21st-century museum. The exhibition spans drawing, sculpture, and installation, as well as objects from and projects based on the Fowler’s collections. The works on view reflect the artist’s affinity for fragments, conflicting histories, undeciphered texts, and other instances of uncertainty within the space of the museum.

Porras-Kim advocates for the complex histories within any museum collection. Her work reflects the Fowler’s long-held vision for curatorial research and experimentation, going back to its earliest incarnation as the Museum and Laboratories of Ethnic Arts and Technology. Her interdisciplinary work asks viewers to consider the limits of academia that may create blind spots in interpretation.

“The weight of a patina of time reflects on the visible and invisible structures of the working museum, through its methods of conservation, registration, and display,” says Porras-Kim. “These become an institutional patina that weighs on the understanding of objects in the collection over time. All of the histories related to the object become additive elements that are considered as subjects of this show.”

In preparation for this exhibition, Porras-Kim worked closely with the museum’s chief curator, Matthew H. Robb, a specialist in the art and archaeology of ancient Mexico. They share an interest in the cyclical nature of knowledge—its creation, maintenance, decay, and recovery in ancient and modern institutional contexts. The five projects on view simultaneously expose and bridge the gaps in our understanding of the past, especially when it is based on incomplete material and textual remains.

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