Locust Projects presents The elephant never forgets, a major multimedia installation in the form of an uncanny backstage TV studio lot by Daniel Arturo Almeida (b. 1992, Caracas, Venezuela) and Adrian Edgard Rivera (b. 1991, Austin, Texas).

Drawing from la vecindad, the iconic setting of the 1970s sitcom El Chavo del ocho1, and other historical and contemporary references from the artists’ experience of a Mexican and Venezuelan mass media, the immersive installation traces Latin American media history to lay bare the socio-political intricacies of memory through themes of transnational telecommunications, piracy as access/agency, the public broadcast theatrics of authoritarianism, constructed memories, and soft power.

The title of the exhibition, The elephant never forgets, is inspired by the third song on side B of Jean-Jacques Perrey's 1970 album Moog Indigo.

This playful electronic adaptation of Beethoven's Turkish march was famously used without authorization as the opening theme for El Chavo, the most watched sitcom in Mexican television history, and still airing today in syndication cementing it as an iconic and unmistakable sound across Latin America and the Spanish-speaking world, including the United States.

The installation invites visitors to enter a TV production studio set filled with screens, costumes, props and set dressings. Suspended from the ceiling, a mass of bootleg marionettes with iconic faces populate the space. An industrial metal puppet theater “castelet”, armored with counterfeit national decorations, frames a hologram. A grouping of monitors tune in footage of a broadcast performance from varying camera angles undressing the manipulative choreography of televised state ceremonies of power. Large photo backdrops cascade down from a towering wall of scaffolding. Spread throughout the gallery, and three oversized heads of El Chavo characters allude to a contentious dispute over copyright and ownership. On the opposite side of the scaffolding is an intimate space, filled with a collection of photos, books, small objects and familial paraphernalia, among them a couch shining in the glow of a TV set displaying footage from 1990s anti-piracy commercials.

Deep economic inequalities and censorship have historically limited access to media, leading to piracy as a way to bypass exclusionary paywalls and state-controlled narratives. In many countries in the region, a volatile economy made a single DVD or video game worth more than a week's salary. Piracy provided agency and became a transformative force, allowing people to remix and escape the oversaturation of foreign media. Fansubs and other grassroots efforts contributed to this cultural exchange. While the issue of piracy raises questions of ownership and authenticity, in the face of cultural flattening, the counterfeit often becomes more authentic than the original.

Almeida and Rivera’s set is a platform where the artists reminisce and reflect upon their respective biographical journeys linked by fragmented memories and layered experiences of a bygone era in Latin American media consumption.

The artists extend their gratitude to artist Itzel Basualdo for her critical role and contributions in the early conceptual development of The elephant never forgets. They also give special thanks to Maria Avellaneda, Roxana Barba, Dimitry Saïd Chamy, Coco Clockner, Haruko Hashimoto, Andres Ibarra, Kevin Leonard, Carlos Fabián Medina, Claudio Marcotulli, Eric Monasterio, Pilar Rodríguez Aranda, Sterling Rook, Corey Silverman, and Harrison Tyler, Inkub8, Bakehouse Art Complex, and Lorie Mertes, Tom Mickelson, Tony Kapel, Nuria Richards, Laurie Rojas and Sid Wolf.

The elephant never forgets was selected from online Open Call for the Main Gallery in 2021 from more than 280 applicants online and was coordinated by Locust Projects’ artist co-founder Elizabeth Withstandley. The 2021 Main Gallery Open Call review panel included: past exhibiting artists Shikeith (2019) and Juana Valdes (2020) and Aldeide Delgado, founder and director of WOPHA (Women Photographers International Archive).

Daniel Arturo Almeida, born in Caracas, Venezuela, is an interdisciplinary artist and independent curator whose work encompasses installation, photography, sculpture, video, and oral history. His practice delves into the intimate and collective stories that shape belief systems, hierarchies of power, and memory in the Americas. His contributions have earned him significant recognition, including a Curatorial Fellowship at The Latinx Project at NYU and membership at NEW INC, New Museum, NY.

Almeida’s artistic journey unfolds through diverse independent and collaborative projects exhibited across the United States at various institutions, galleries, and festivals, including A.I.R. Gallery, Tiger Strikes Asteroids, La Salita Project, Columbia Teachers College, Satellite Art Show, and SVA Chelsea Galleries, among others. In addition to his artistic practice, Almeida is deeply engaged in curation. He recently curated Roxana Barba’s solo exhibition Dos cuerpos at Laundromat Art Space and co-curated Pattern/Makers alongside Dimitry Saïd Chamy. Since 2022, he has been collaborating with artist Jennifer Wen Ma and artist and oral historian Nyssa Chow on various oral history projects, including An inward sea: oral history.

Adrián Edgard Rivera, born in 1991 in Austin, Texas, and raised in Yautepec de Zaragoza, Morelos, Mexico, is a contemporary artist who currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Rivera's artistic journey is marked by a series of thought-provoking exhibitions, including recent showcases at Black Brick Project and Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery in New York. His work delves into themes of identity, culture, and memory, as seen in his solo exhibition at Plexus Projects and participation in various curated group shows across prominent New York venues. Rivera's commitment to his craft has been recognized through residencies and awards, notably at The New Museum's New Inc program and Plexus Projects. Beyond his visual art practice, Rivera engages with the art community through lectures and talks, sharing his insights and experiences at institutions like the Institute of Contemporary Art Miami and Northern Michigan University, fostering dialogues that bridge art and technology.

The elephant never forgets is a Knight Digital Commission and is supported in part by Funding Arts Network.

Notes

1 El Chavo del ocho is a Mexican situational comedy television series created by and starring Roberto Gómez Bolaños , and produced by Televisión Independiente de México (later, Televisa ). El Chavo first appeared in 1971 as a sketch on a Mexican show called Chespirito. It officially ended in 1980. Syndicated episodes existed until 1992 and was broadcast across all of Latin America, Brazil, Spain and the United States with an approximate audience of around 350 million people per episode across the Americas. LINK