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Artworks
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Installation photograph from Joiri Minaya: Geographic Bodies, The 8th Floor, Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation, New York, March 13 - June 14, 2025 (solo exhibition)
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The pattern for Joiri Minaya's 2021 cloaking of the Christopher Columbus statue in front of the Basilica Cathedral of Santa María la Menor, the first and oldest cathedral in the Americas, located in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
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Encubrimiento (de la estatua de Cristóbal Colón en el Parque Colón de la Ciudad Colonial en Santo Domingo, República Dominicana), 2021, from The Cloaking Series
Joiri Minaya
Tobacco #1, 2020Gouache on Yupo paper14 x 11 inches
15 1/16 x 12 1/16 inches framedJM040$ 5,000.00Further images
This painting is within the pattern of Encubrimiento (de la estatua de Cristóbal Colón en el Parque Colón de la Ciudad Colonial en Santo Domingo, República Dominicana). In Encubrimiento, after...This painting is within the pattern of Encubrimiento (de la estatua de Cristóbal Colón en el Parque Colón de la Ciudad Colonial en Santo Domingo, República Dominicana). In Encubrimiento, after being long ignored by permit-granting administrations, we covered Columbus without a permit at 5 am with a design featuring plants the Taino used to resist colonizers in the 1500's Hispaniola. It made it to national news, sparking a widespread online discussion both in support and against the action.I originally made this selection of paintings to incorporate into the pattern I created to cover the Christopher Columbus statue in front of the Basilica Cathedral of Santa María la Menor, the first and oldest cathedral in the Americas. The installation was one iteration of the Cloaking series, which challenges the presence of colonial statues in urban spaces, using colorful spandex fabric to conceal and simultaneously bring attention to these monuments, questioning which narratives get memorialized and which are omitted.
Tobacco is of spiritual importance in Dominican Black and Indigenous history and culture, as the smoke was used for communication with ancestors, initially by Taínos, a practice that was later inherited by people of African descent. This tradition survives in afro-centric beliefs and practices in the island.
Since the cathedral is built upon what used to be a Taíno cemetery, I thought of the image of a burning tobacco leaf on top of the cathedral as a poetic decolonial gesture.
Exhibitions
Geographic Bodies. March 13 – June 14, 2025, The 8th Floor, New York, NY.Publications
"Joiri Minaya: Geographic Bodies," Brooklyn Rail, Elizabeth Wiet, June 2025. https://brooklynrail.org/2025/06/artseen/joiri-minaya-geographic-bodies/

