UNIVERSIDAD POLITÉCNICA DE MADRID ESCUELA TÉCNICA SUPERIOR DE ARQUITECTURA
udd
24
Rediscovering Utopia
federico soriano Textos 2019-2020
06
Riikka Haapalainen. Rediscovering Utopia in Francis Alÿs’ “When Faith
Moves Mountains”. Seismopolite. Journal of Art and Politics. 2016.
“Many said the art project was crazy. Or just silly. To move a mountain. Why come to Peru to waste your time?”[1] In the following I will discuss the utopian possibilities in one contemporary art work, namely Belgian Francis Alÿs’[2] participatory art project When faith moves mountains. The aim of this project for “geological displacement” was to move a surface of a sand dune 10 centimeters from its original place by volunteer students, equipped with shovels in outskirts of Lima, Peru in 2002. The title of the artwork When Faith moves mountains alludes to an ancient myth, announcing and starting off a fable-resembling narrative and its morale. Moving a mountain is not only about shoveling labor, nor just about will, but first and foremost about faith. The art project resembles a myth: The video documenting the project begins at the moment when the artist is looking for a suitable mountain to move. After this, participants and the eyewitnesses recount what happened during the project, and only after that the actual displacement of the mountain is revealed to the audience. Mircea Eliade has stated that when a myth is being told, it becomes a steadfast truth.[3] In my reading, this narrativity also clears the path for an immaterial utopia. Utopia translates as a place that is not; a non-place. As Bertolt Brecht defined it, utopia emerges where ”etwas fehlt”, where something is missing.[4] Therefore, 1