“In my work I kept the same motif, the road trips, creating these mix of surreal and magical realistic viewings of climate change, natural disasters and how affects humanity since ancient times” —Ursula Vargas

Born in Lima , Peru

Ursula Vargas lives and works in between Peru and the UK where she completed a Fine Art Painting degree at the University of Brighton in 2020. She previously attended the Pontificie Universidad Católica del Peru to study Visual Arts. She has been involved in exhibitions in Peru, South Africa (Port-Elizabeth, Humansdorp and the Grahamstown Arts Festival) and now has a developing career in Europe with numerous shows in the South East, including London and Paris.

Current Practice

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Vargas’ current engagement with pictorial narrative is clearly contemporary, presenting often eccentric and sometimes bizarre magic-realist scenarios. But the ‘contemporary’ of course is a symptom or consequence of the past and Vargas taps into a rich heritage from her cultural South American routes, plus her own childhood. The carefully selected visual material, assimilating characters, artefacts and landscapes, invented, appropriated, real or mythical from past and present cultures consolidate a pan-historical vision when presented within a story-like visual framework. After all, human societies have thrived on tales and fictions across millennia whether spoken, written or visualised. As a contemporary practitioner with an acute awareness of the challenges that face the planet today her bold visual narratives reference climate change, the human exploitation of natural resources and its effects on populations. In this sense the work is futuristic too, though maybe in the sense of a ticking time bomb given the possible consequences of environmental issues.

SUBJECT MATTER

Her subject matter is characteristically personal and shared by many. From a family history, which included many extended motorway journeys and recollections of ancient archaeological sites, she is able to utilise various narrative sources into a kind of play for today, where “all the world’s a stage”. Yet the players can include often-humorous visual references to Coyote and Roadrunner cartoons or figures from pre-Columbian art. Landscape scenarios and often-repeated ingredients (mountains, tunnels and roads; San Pedro cactus and road signs) are principal ingredients in Vargas’ neo-surrealist scenes that invite and provoke personal readings and translations from the viewer. But this apparent playfulness, where visual engagement might feel direct, easy and uncomplicated, transforms into a conduit leading to a cinematic, cut and paste, sense of time and place of both experienced and imagined ‘reality’. Vargas is fascinated by and curious about the relation between what we see and what we think we know. Coercing a creative response that may never be settled or certain, her various works often challenge the viewer to suspend routine judgments to allow the imagination to play awhile.

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CONTENT

The road motif in her work, might represent modernity (albeit now linked with a post-industrial questioning of energy usage and air pollution) but also functions as a prompt to travel imaginatively into the past, present and future. This is a demanding journey where the medium grapples with the message, as paint and collage, or recycled cardboard waste replacing fine canvas, vies with potent imagery. Another motif-type prop is the San Pedro cactus, which the Incas used to drink to connect with their Gods. Nowadays, on a secular level, the placing of a cactus at the doorway of homes throughout Peru and surrounding countries acts as a guardian to protect against intruders. As content in Vargas’ imagery the association is truly more magic-realist, psychedelic even, in invoking rituals of the shaman. Affected by alucinaciones (hallucinations), from drinking mescaline derived from San Pedro, the intensity of the colours of the perceived world may well resemble the colour palette chosen by Vargas.

SYMBOLS AND SIGNS

As a conjurer of such fascinating content in her work, Vargas utilises pictorial tropes as signs (simple instructions) to indicatively become symbols that we might now read as warnings. Spectacle may initially subvert substance but a strong semblance of narrative, however magical or super-real, prompts a desire to make sense of current times and places in which the existential realities of life on an endangered planet inexorably dominates the natural world from urban litter to oil pollution. Such a message could be conveyed subtly or associatively - or even ‘in our faces’ as the use of litter suggests in some works.

Photo Credit: Anne Tinner

Photo Credit: Anne Tinner

CONTEXT

The viewer might read Vargas’ staged narratives as demonstrations of a contemporary folk tale, warning or prophecy that even the trickster Coyote would struggle to adapt to, comprehend and accept. For a moral allegory, in what might initially appear to be a linear narrative, turns out, on reflection, to resurrect rather than travel to the past and to conjoin eras initiating a sense of time that is overarching. These apparent flashbacks or hallucinations are repeated, cyclical echoes rather than fragments of memory - only now the end game becomes a reality.

The artist today might be best placed to address the task of leaving room for the viewer to engage and self-question. This goes against the grain of the mass media dominated political and economic terrain that binds us all as consumers to a capitalist system (conjoining the political evils of Left and Right) on the brink of self-destruction. A hopeful interpretation might be that the power and potential of the individual, armed with a fertile imagination, may well succeed in undermining the corporate hegemony that hurtles the planet towards a point of no return.

If you are willing to jump on board Vargas’ time machine, occupy a window view and be prepared to participate in the action. But be proactive, not passive: for only the audience can save the day.

Text written by Geoff Hands

CV

Education and Qualifications

2020
B.A. Hons Fine Art Painting, University of Brighton

2016
Art Foundation course, Brighton College MET

1984-86
Art Foundation course, Pontificie Universidad Catolica del Peru

1982-84
Humanities, Antropology, Pontificie Universidad Catolica del Peru

Exhibitions

1986
Visual Arts Program Exhibition, Universidad Catolica del Peru

1998
Moving Pictures, Solo exhibition in Humansdorp, South Africa
Collective Exhibition, Port Elizabeth Museum, South Africa

1999
Grahamstown Art Festival. South Africa
Collective Exhibition Port Elizabeth Museum, South Africa

2016
Brighton Festival Casa Latina Open House
Grange Gallery Artists Open House, Rottingdean, Brighton, Uk

2017
Twenty by Twenty, New Artists collective, Onca Gallery, Brighton, UK

2019
How Did We Get Here? Decolonial Exhibition, University of Brighton, Uk
Age Of: Exploration, Second Year Fine Art Exhibition, University of Brighton Grand Parade, Uk
Limbo, Collective Exhibition at SEAS Brighton, UK
Is All About Us, duo exhibition with a Brighton collaborative artist, Coachwerks Gallery, Brighton, Uk
Narrative Exhibition, collective exhibition in collaboration with Fiveways artists group, Brighton, Uk
New Artists Fair, The Old Truman Brewery, London, Uk

2020
Material Practices 3, Hove Museum, Brighton & Hove, Uk
Final Year Show, University of Brighton, Uk
Platform Graduate Award CVAN South East Exhibition Phoenix Art Space Gallery Brighton 
What Artists Do All Day In The Year Of Covid 19, The Grange Gallery, Rottingdean Brighton Uk
The Conceptual Art , Zine, Haus A Rest, Uk
Liberty Specialty Markets exhibition, Art Award nomination, London, Uk

2021

Jungle, Katmapped, online exhibition,Uk Nature, Art Room Contemporary Gallery Online, Uk Don’t Bring Flowers, Brighton Fishing Museum Gallery, Uk Highlights, Boomer Gallery, London, Uk Princess Crescent Presents, AOH , Brighton & Hove, Uk LSM Art Award Yearly Exhibition, Liberty Specialty Markets, London, Uk New Artist Fair, Old truman Brewery, London, Uk Carroussel de Louvre Art Fair, represented by Paks Gallery, Paris, France

Selected Reviews & Publishings

1989-99
Humansdorp newspaper, South Africa

2016
The Deans
Rottingdean Village News
Latest Home Magazine

2020 Haus A Rest: The Conceptual Art, Zine Issue, 4 https://haus-a-rest.squarespace.com

Ruminations: Exhibition Review Phoenix Art Space Brighton, Uk https://fineartruminations.com/2020/11/12/cvan-south-east-2020-platform-graduate- award/

2021   Fine Arts Ruminations: Exhibition Review, Geoff Hands https://fineartruminations.com/2021/03/27/ursula-vargas/

Boomer Gallery: Highlights Exhibition’s 1st published Issue, London, Uk

Liberty Specialty Markets: Awards review https://www.libertyspecialtymarkets.com/art-award/artist/ursula-vargas

Paks Gallery: Carroussel de Louvre Art Fair published review, Paris, France

2022 Riquezas Peruanas Uk: Artist’s Day Interview https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=153567937313734&id=100079815861538

Workshops & Teaching

2001
Peruano-Britanico Private School: Visual Arts Bachelorate program Tutor, Lima, Peru

2004
El Piaggio Secondary School: Arts Tutor, Piura, Peru

Awards

1999
Public Award for “Outstanding Contribution Towards Cultural Development “awarded by the Minister of The National Department of Arts and Culture, South Africa

2020
Nomination for the Cvan South East Uk Graduate award

2020
LSM Art award nomination, London, Uk

2021 Honorable Mention, Nature online exhibition, Art Room Contemporary Gallery, Uk