Ana González turns to Colombia’s forests, rivers and mineral wealth in a new exhibition at Riley CAP Gallery S8, where the landscape is presented as both subject and warning. Working across media, González focuses on the environmental damage tied to gold mining, linking present-day extraction to older narratives of greed and conquest. The project places ecological loss at the center, while also pointing to the communities most directly affected, especially Indigenous populations living along waterways and in forest regions.
The exhibition uses printed textiles as its main visual form. González’s landscapes appear on roughened tarp, a material that reinforces the instability of the scenes she depicts. In several works, the lower edge of the fabric has been deliberately unwoven, turning part of the image into a faded, almost disappearing surface. The effect suggests erosion, both physical and cultural, and gives the landscapes a fragile, unfinished quality.
Gold mining in Colombia provides the exhibition’s central frame. Over the past three decades, rising gold prices and illegal extraction have intensified pressure on land and water, causing deforestation, pollution and loss of biodiversity. González responds to those conditions with yellow-toned compositions that show dense vegetation and river systems, setting the visual appeal of the region against the damage being done to it. The work makes clear that extraction affects not only ecosystems but also local livelihoods and social structures.
The title of the project also reaches back to the legend of El Dorado, the mythical city of gold sought by Spanish colonizers in South America. González uses that story as a reference point for contemporary forms of exploitation, suggesting that the pursuit of wealth continues to shape the region in destructive ways. Here, the land is presented not as a source of fantasy or profit, but as something far more urgent: a living environment under strain.
Alongside the textiles, the exhibition includes porcelain flowers native to Colombia and an ambient jungle recording made by the artist. Together, these elements create a direct sensory link to the natural world González seeks to defend.
Image:
Ana González (Colombian, b. 1974), CEIBA, 2025, triptych sublimation printing on roughened tarp, each: 117 1/2 × 59 1/4 in. (298.4 × 150.5 cm), overall: 117 1/2 × 180 3/4 in. (298.4 × 459.1 cm) © Ana González, Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York