Flanking the gates of Santo Domingo’s Chinatown in the Dominican Republic are two stone lions, weather‑beaten and ornately detailed, their jaws hinged open in an intimidating growl. The day artist Eduardo Enrique visited, however, a plastic bottle had been jammed between one of the pair’s teeth. Maybe someone was waiting for the garbage truck to come, maybe someone was too lazy to dump it in the bin. But there it was, grandeur defaced by a bottle.
“It went from being something really sacred to being a cartoon character,” he says. “This cultural accident—the vandalism of an object of high culture by somebody who had no idea [about its meaning—was a perfect example of ] globalisation gone wrong.” For an artist who has dedicated his practice to interrogating our fetishistic relationships to brands, commodities and consumerism, Enrique knew in that instant that no artwork he could fashion would ever be as powerful as that mundane masterpiece of absurdity.
In fact, Enrique’s work thrives on the recontextualisation of the mundane, which is exactly how his commentary on capitalist consumerism and globalisation is so pointed. In 2019, he started an anonymous Instagram account called Dick Worldwide, featuring luxury bags and shoes transformed into the titular male body part. By 2020, he was putting on shows under his name, including Brand Love in 2022, showcasing BDSM gear he designed that came branded with Nike logos—a continuation of themes earlier explored in Dick Worldwide. Elsewhere, he has digitally rendered antiques with branded, modern goods—think a Chinese bronze vessel with a Nike basketball, and a brass bowl emblazoned with the BMW logo. The effect is jarring and sometimes provocative, forcing us to question how entrenched our relationships with brands and commodities really are.
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