Nathan Gibbs on Oscar Ortega's sculpture “Entre Ventana y Puerta” [1] or “Between a Window and a Door” in Tijuana: “He explained the title as a description of Tijuana’s physical (and perhaps psychological) situation. It’s an incredibly transited city, but has no seaport, making its coastline only a “window.” The “door” refers to the U.S. border — a door locked for many. The piece, like the city, is rich with layered symbols: the hand of Mexican labor, cars circle the base endlessly, the round indigenous blocks carved with the men’s bathroom figure, the jumbled mosaic like the residential architecture covering Tijuana’s hillsides.”
Mexico: Tijuana: “Between a Window and a Door”
· Written by David Sasaki
Categories: Latin America, Mexico, Arts & Culture