In early October, a group of Native American and indigenous artists plans to unveil the largest bi-national land art installation ever shown on the U.S./Mexico border. The interdisciplinary four-person group — Raven Chacon, Cristóbal Martínez, Kade L. Twist and Nathan Young — is Postcommodity, and together, the artists are known for creating socially conscious and culturally focused works shown in galleries and museums in Arizona and around the country. But in October, the group has an especially ambitious vision: tethering more than two dozen 10-foot-diameter balloons more than 50 feet in the air. The balloons, decorated with large "scare eyes" (used in farming to deter large predator birds), will create a temporary two-mile-long sculpture intersecting the border. The aim is to connect American Indian, Latin American, and Mexican immigrant communities in one of the most divided, hostile, and militarized zones in the Western Hemisphere — which means it's time to mark your calendars and fill your gas tanks. Border art history is in progress.
www.postcommodity.com