Testimony and secrecy of a traumatic past: the 'times of danger' in Sarhua's visual art.

Authors

  • Olga González Macalester College
    Profesora asociada en el Departamento de Antropología de Macalester College. Es autora del libro Unveiling Secrets of War in the Peruvian Andes (Develando secretos de la guerra en los Andes peruanos). También ha sido asesora de dos muestras itinerantes de arte en los Estados Unidos, Weavings of War: Fabrics of Memory (Tejidos de la guerra: tramas de la memoria) y Ayacucho: Tradition and Crisis in Peruvian Popular Art (Ayacucho: tradición y crisis en el arte popular Peruano). El año 2012 fue curadora de la exposición Ayacucho: Los Tiempos del Peligro que incluyó la colección de tablas pintadas de Sarhua Piraq Causa que figuran en su libro. Su investigación actual se centra en la relación entre visua- lidad y memoria en el contexto de «posconflicto» en Perú. Correo electrónico: ogonzale@macalester.edu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/anthropologica.201501.005

Keywords:

art, memory, Peru, Sarhua, secrecy, trauma, violence, testimony

Abstract

This article discusses the fate of dangerous memories of war associated with the “internal armed conflict” in Peru. It focuses on the Andean community of Sarhua in Ayacucho and their experiences with political violence as depicted in a collection of paintings, Piraq Causa (Who Is Still to Blame?). A close examination of this visual testimonio reveals that some dangerous memories have been denied representation. I suggest that these become silences and absences that give expression to a “traumatic gap”, which includes memories of fratricidal violence and the community’s initial endorsement of the Maoist Shining Path. I argue that Piraq Causa reflects the magnified secrecy around events that the community agreed to deliberately “remember to forget”. In so doing, I also propose that the perceived gaps in the pictorial narrative provoke the unmasking of what is “secretly familiar” in Sarhua. To that extent, Piraq Causa exposes as much as it affirms the secrecy around traumatic memories of war.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2015-07-02

How to Cite

González, O. (2015). Testimony and secrecy of a traumatic past: the ’times of danger’ in Sarhua’s visual art. Anthropologica Del Departamento De Ciencias Sociales, 33(34), 89–118. https://doi.org/10.18800/anthropologica.201501.005