LA MONTAÑA SAGRADA. Sorondo Projects. Barcelona, 2026

La montaña sagrada
“One does not climb into a mountain; one enters it.”
Nan Shepherd, The Living Mountain
In La montaña sagrada (The Sacred Mountain), Suwon Lee brings together
three lines of work which, though distinct in form and materiality, converge
within a single constellation of meaning. The mountain appears as a
metaphor for origin, the body, and memory, and as a site from which to
reflect on the diasporic experience.
The main series, titled La montaña sagrada, focuses on mountains from
different geographies, among them Pico Bolívar, the Sierra Nevada de Santa
Marta, Mount Shasta, Mont Blanc, Mount Everest, and Mount Teide. Working
from images taken from vintage postcards that the artist collects, enlarges,
prints, and intervenes with oil pigments, these works activate the landscape
as a territory with a spiritual dimension. The interventions do not seek to
idealize the sites, but rather to awaken their symbolic power; they project
experiences of displacement, loss, and the search for belonging.
Within this series, the Canaima diptych occupies a central position. In this
work, the tepuis, sky, and earth are articulated together with water, present
both as river and waterfall, forming an image in which these elements
converge. More than a representation of a specific landscape, Canaima
functions as a symbolic synthesis in which geological, atmospheric, and
fluvial forces intertwine in a tense, dynamic balance. The work condenses an
understanding of territory as an energetic field and a space of origin, a place
where material and spiritual dimensions overlap. In this sense, Canaima
emerges as an affective and conceptual core of the project, an image of high
symbolic intensity from which the rest of the series is structured.
Lee conceives the mountain as a place one enters, one that demands time,
presence, and attention, rather than as a space defined by the conquest of a
summit. In this way, artistic practice becomes contemplative, and looking
turns into a form of dwelling.
This notion extends into the series Dictée/Exilée, composed of collages and a
video derived from the performance of the same name presented at
Americas Society in 2024. In these works, language unfolds like a linguistic
mountain, stratified by layers of memory, migration, and silence. Drawing on
texts from the work of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Lee overlays images of
prisons in which political prisoners in Venezuela are held onto landscapes,
configuring a topography of political trauma and diasporic memory that
alludes to notions such as border, absence, and blurring.
Alongside these works is Tejiendo el origen (Weaving the Origin), composed
of two vintage photographs of the artist’s grandparents that are interwoven
and suspended in space, functioning as a genealogical foundation. Here, the
gesture of joining the images operates as an act of repair, in which genealogy
and affection intertwine as an emotional root and a point of return.
Taken together, the works construct a sensitive cartography in which
genealogy, language, and memory intersect with the experience of territory.
The mountain is not a fixed symbol, but a method and a practice of attention,
a way of seeing, remembering, and remaining.
























