
Once Upon a Field
Abdesslem Ayed, Raphaël Barontini, Amoako Boafo, Omar Victor Diop, Slimen Elkamel, Salah Elmur, Clotilde Jiménez, Ian Micheal, Youssef Nabil, Peter Robinson, Abderrahmane Sissako, Peter Uka
Mariane Ibrahim Gallery - CDMX
Río Pánuco 36, Col. Renacimiento, Ciudad de México, Cuauhtémoc 06500
Tue–Fri 11am–6pm, Sat 11am–4pm
Admission
Free Admission
About
Once Upon a Field is built around a play on words that, much like this World Cup itself, moves across languages and territories. _Once_ means “eleven” in Spanish —the eleven players on the pitch— while also evoking the beginning of a story: _once upon a time_. The exhibition brings together eleven storytellers, eleven artists who bring to Mexico narratives shaped by imagination and play, but also by politics, memory, migration, and war. Because football has never been merely a sport. Before the stadiums, there is the impulse to play, one that begins in childhood: in the street, in schoolyards, or on improvised fields where any object can become a ball and any space can become a pitch. Even when the ball disappears, the game endures. This is what Abderrahmane Sissako reveals in _Timbuktu_: a group of young men and children play an imaginary football match while the game itself has been forbidden. The ball is absent, yet the bodies continue running. In many ways, Sissako becomes the spiritual coach of the exhibition, and the invisible ball of _Timbuktu_ travels from story to story throughout the show. The exhibition also includes a selection of works by acclaimed photographer Peter Robinson, whose gaze explored for more than six decades both the grand spectacle of world football and the quiet poetry found at its margins. From Diego Maradona celebrating in Mexico after the “Hand of God” goal during the 1986 World Cup, to images of an amateur match played in Chapultepec Park in 1985, Robinson’s photographs reveal how football exists simultaneously as global legend and everyday experience. Through painting, photography, installation, and film, _Once Upon a Field_ approaches football through the emotion of celebrating a goal: as a site where shared fictions are created, where bodies passionately rehearse other ways of moving, where world history is reflected and contested, and where the game ultimately remains possible even when the ball disappears.