My work seeks to point out the impact of the colonial proposal of life that confronts nature in an extractive way, in its perpetual search for progress and development. Also suggesting that our relationships with other earth-beings (De la Cadena) activate alternatives for transformative action. Revisiting the myth of Narcissus I realize that it is implied that he has never done the exercise of “seeing” himself. Narcissus’ encounter with water causes him to become obsessed with the projection of his image, to the point of losing his life. Besides the critique of vanity, one could also read a warning. Could the myth also be an ecological warning about the power of water and the persistence of life? Narcissus dies but in the same place a flower of the same name is born.
Museo Convento San Francisco y Las Catacumbas de Lima.