Texto por Natasha Christia
Barcelona, 2007
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Born in Chile in 1979, but based in Barcelona for 8 years, she develops her photographic projects as cartographies of the traces that human beings leave in the world that surrounds them.
Since practically the beginning of her career, in the late nineties, Maria Luisa Murillo has focused her projects on intimacy, everyday routine and monotony as lived as human experiencies. However, while her firsts works express these concepts by means of a literal and apparently smplified capture of everyday actions in domestic environments, her point of focus shifted gradually towards a rather abstract and metaphorical representation. Spaces took center stage as recetors of collective history at the expense of the private sphere.
The cities of Murillo emerged then as a great paradox: uninhabited silent urban landscapes, revealed in their desert monotony as symbolic and evocative registers of lived history. New York is transformed as a sensitive and mutant “Phantom City”, far form the noisy “Big Apple” stereotype. In Berlin, the metro stations of the German capital are imbued in a melancholic and solitary spirit. However, contrary to the expectations, the artist sustains that her landscapes are not static beings. They are, rather, bodies moulded day and night by the material and graphic traces of collective and and individual activism. As if they were mirrors, the space we inhabits “speak for themselves” denoting our organic relationship with them. It is precisely this individual and social acknowledgement of the underlying dialectic between us and our environment. The poetry of daily life.
Text by Natasha Christia
Barcelone, 2007