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Interview

Ernesto Salmerón Explores a Truckload of Nicaraguan History

Meet the Nicaraguan artist exploring the legacy of revolution in his country

I was interested in understanding my own society. There’s no one way to understand Nicaraguan history.

Ernesto Salmerón

Ernesto Salmeron
Auras of War (1996–2006)
Tate

Ernesto Salmerón trained as a filmmaker and documentary photographer before turning to other forms of art including social sculpture.

Auras of War documents and explores the Nicaraguan revolution. The work is made up of a truck, a section of concrete wall, video and other materials.

‘The whole thing started with a photograph of graffiti with an image of Augusto Calderón Sandino’, explains Salmerón. ‘He was used as an icon for a new revolutionary movement in the 1970s.’

After learning the attached building was to be demolished, Salmerón excavated the graffiti in 2006 and permanently installed it into the back of a former military truck.

A relic of the revolution, the truck was sent by the German Democratic Republic to Nicaragua in support of the Sandinistas’ socialist cause. ‘This truck is a testimony to political conflict’, says Salmerón.

The wall and truck have travelled a great distance from their original contexts and are now exhibited in public spaces like É«¿Ø´«Ã½. Their presence raises questions about the revolutionary ideas they symbolise and how those ideas move and transform over time.

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