![Tania Ximena, 2024, La Marcha del Líquen [The March of the Lichen] (vídeo still)](/sites/default/files/styles/max_325x325/public/2025-08/Tania%20Ximena%2C%202024%2C%20La%20Marcha%20del%20L%C3%ADquen%20%28frame%20do%20v%C3%ADdeo%29.jpg?itok=NC4ZWt2p)
Video Room: Tania Ximena Tania Ximena
MASP - Assis Chateaubriand Museum of Art of São Paulo
Avenida Paulista, 1578 - Bela Vista
01310-200 São Paulo, SP
São Paulo-SP
01310-200
Brésil
The exhibition features La Marcha del Líquen [The March of the Lichen] (2024), one of the most recent films by Mexican artist Tania Ximena, which has already been shown at several festivals and at the 15th FEMSA Biennial. The film stands out for its focus on landscapes and ecosystems, which the artist explores through the lens of the interconnectedness of all living and non-living beings, including the geological and natural elements that comprise life on Earth.
La Marcha del Líquen is presented on two channels and documents transformations in geographically distant yet closely connected territories. The first video, filmed in Antarctica, documents the melting of glacial ice and the subsequent greening of the landscape due to the growth of lichens and mosses on the exposed soil. As the polar white recedes—a natural process accelerated by climate change—green overtakes the Antarctic continent.
The second channel, filmed in the mangroves and swamps of Centla in Tabasco, Mexico, explores the coastal erosion that led to the disappearance of the indigenous Yokot’an community of El Bosque. This erosion is an indirect consequence of polar ice melt and rising sea levels. The region has historically experienced water cycles, but the intensification of these events caused the Yokot’an to replace their traditional construction techniques with modern masonry. However, the new structures did not withstand the floods. Submerged trees and the ruins of buildings appear in the video as traces of El Bosque’s former occupation.
Based on these two contexts, the work takes a close look at the effects of the climate emergency. It suggests that human ways of life become vulnerable to disappearance in the face of landscape transformations. At the same time, the work questions humanity's ability or choice to adapt by abandoning ancestral relationships with the land in favor of fragile solutions in the face of the force of nature. Rather than merely denouncing global warming, the work invites reflection on alternative ways of inhabiting the planet and on the possibility of learning from natural cycles.
Curated by Matheus de Andrade, assistant curator at MASP, the Video Room offers an immersive experience in these environments. The projection occurs in sequence: first, images of Antarctica occupy the main wall; then, the narrative continues on the screen to the left, with scenes filmed in Mexico. This spatial arrangement reinforces the geographical distance between the territories portrayed and highlights the specificities of each ecosystem, while suggesting connections between distinct processes that are interconnected by the climate crisis.