Iván Navarro is an artist who works with light, mirrors, and neon to craft socially and politically relevant sculptures and installations.
Background
Navarro was born and raised in Santiago, Chile, and the dictatorship of his homeland has had a profound impact on his work, both in his choice of medium, and in the meaning his neon sculptures and pieces of faux-furniture hold. As he grew up during the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet, Navarro was used to electricity being shut off to keep citizens at home and isolated. “All the pieces that I’ve made make reference to controlling activity, and electricity was a way to control people.”.
Career
""This is my version of the electric chair," the artist explains. Electricity was one of the tools of torture preferred by the Chilean government, but the piece also has local currency. On the paper seat, he has written the names of every individual executed in Florida by electric chair, to bear witness to the state"s record on capital punishment." These abyss-like works can link back to Navarro"s pre-occupation of being abducted as a child, as he navigates his past and readily admits: "There is a certain amount of fear in my pieces.".
Politics
An example of Navarro"s work being steeped in his homeland"s history while also speaking to current political debates, is his "You Sit, You Die," which consists of a lounge chair built from white fluorescent tubes. Navarro also works with mirrors, alongside light, in which viewers lose themselves in an apparently infinite space, as neon phrases or structures loom out, and suggest what lies beyond.