TIMELINES FOR THE FUTURE:  Christine Howard Sandoval 

Curated by Lucy Cotter
January 8 – February 21, 2021
Photos by Mario Gallucci
Gallery Guide

Video by Eric Mellencamp

A dialogue between artist Christine Howard Sandoval and curator Lucy Cotter about the solo exhibition currently on view at Disjecta. Recorded from a live discussion on Zoom held on February 9, 2021.



We already know where we exist in the land, how we have remained for thousands of years in the place of our ancestors. We are rising from the ground and literally toppling colonial structures and its monuments to genocide. The seeds of our future have always been alive and present, and are growing into visible manifestations of what we know to be the truth.”   -Christine Howard Sandoval

Christine Howard Sandoval’s practice revolves around the embodied act of walking on sites of precarious and contested land. Negotiating the material contours of urban and rural landscapes, their inherent layers of human memory, and their political and ecological stakes in the present, she seeks to un-learn things as they are. Through sustained artistic research, and working through video, drawing, and sculpture, she forges future imaginaries of place that emerge from competing records of human inhabitance. 

Working with community members, anthropologists and scientists, and researching historical documents, Howard Sandoval often creates scripted narratives that are performed as voice-overs in videos that trace her laborious walking paths. Through an experimental use of film, she provides disorienting bodily perspectives that destabilize the norms of viewing, moving away from the photographic gaze and its extraction of images from place. Walking thus becomes an active form of knowledge creation. Embedded with site-specific materials, Howard Sandoval’s drawings and sculptures seek to counteract the distance and abstraction of cartography and its complicity with territorial imposition. Her archival constellations act as an unwinding of imaginaries in search of alternate forms of inhabitation and human agency.    

The Disjecta exhibition will present a series of new and recent works that encompass these many facets of Howard Sandoval’s oeuvre. Channel (2016-19), a passage of sculpture, video installation, and mixed media drawings, addresses the complex relationship between Hispanic and Native agrarian histories and current riparian rights and land uses. Live Stream (2018) is a performance-based video that re-inscribes disappeared migratory paths and waterways in and around the site of the Acequia Madre in Taos, New Mexico; drawing on her research on ancient water democracies (Acequias). Filmed using a body-cam, the video work sets out to deflect the surveillance-oriented nature of this technology to create an embodied portrait which foregrounds invisible and contested narratives of human inhabitation. 

Howard Sandoval’s latest project A wall is a shadow on the land (2020- ) un-tells the story of Spanish “missionization” by taking the departure point of her Chumash great-grandparents. Unfolding a history of enslaved laborers who built the missionary adobe structures along the Pacific Coast, her research teases out the material forms of this architecture and engages with modularized constructions built on top of Indigenous sacred sites and architectures from South America to Alta California. Through archival images and adobe drawings, Howard Sandoval re-maps these sites to work towards alternate political and material imaginaries.

Christine Howard Sandoval (b.1975, Anaheim, California) is an interdisciplinary artist of Obispeño Chumash and Hispanic ancestry based in Vancouver B.C. Her work challenges the boundaries of representation, access, and habitation of contested places through performance, video, and sculpture. Recent solo exhibitions include Channel at The Colorado Springs Fine Art Center (2019) and A Wall is A Shadow on the Land, opening at Vancouver Art Gallery, B.C., opening in January 2021. She has exhibited nationally and internationally at, among other venues, El Museo Del Barrio (Bronx, NY); Socrates Sculpture Park (Queens, NY); The Museum of Capitalism (Oakland, CA), and Designtransfer, Universität der Künste (Berlin, Germany). Howard Sandoval has been awarded residencies at the Santa Fe Art Institute, Triangle Arts; The Vermont Studio Center, and Colorado College. She holds a BFA from Pratt Institute (NY) and an MFA from Parsons The New School for Design (NY). She is currently an Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Praxis at Emily Carr University, Vancouver (BC).

The 2020-21 Curator in Residence Season 10 is supported by the Oregon Cultural Trust, The Marie Lamfrom Charitable Foundation, The Dutch Culture USA program by the Consulate General of the Netherlands in New York, The Mondriaan Fund, and the North Portland Trust Fund. Disjecta Contemporary Art Center is also supported by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Robert & Mercedes Eichholz Foundation, VIA Art Fund and Wagner Foundation, Maybelle Clark McDonald Fund, James F. & Marion L. Miller Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Oregon Arts Commission, Oregon Arts and Culture Emergency Fund, Oregon CARES, and the Regional Arts & Culture Council. Other businesses and individuals provided additional support.