Kanasto de Origen

Kanasto de Origen

Aimena Úai

Artist’s country of origen: Colombia
Materials: Mixed media: dragon’s blood resin, mambe, and wito on canvas

Size: 80 × 90 cm (31.5 × 35.4 in)
Year: 2024

Line of Inquiry:

Coca-Worlds

The Maloka and everything learned within it form a constellation of great interconnected knowledges. In this context, the kanasto embodies the image and practice of weaving the Murui word-thought: a living archive opened to teach, heal, deliberate, and envision the future—anchored in the mambeadero, the house, and the plants of power.

The Artist

Aimena Úai

Aimema Úai —The Voice of the Crane— is a contemporary artist, mambeólogo (coca practitioner), and researcher from the Murui-Muina people of the Colombian Amazon. Born in La Chorrera in 1996, his artistic formation is deeply rooted in the ancestral knowledge of his family.

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Seeking the Origin

Seeking the Origin

Aimena Úai

Artist’s country of origen: Colombia
Materials: Mambe, wito, and oil on canvas

Size: 90 x 150 cm
Year: 2024

Line of Inquiry:

Coca-Politics Coca-Worlds

In Seeking the Origin, Aimema Úai evokes the memory of his grandparents and the path that connects his territory to ancestral knowledge. The work is part of the Caminos (íio) series, in which painting becomes a gesture of spiritual search and return to his Murui-Muina roots. From his place of origin —La Chorrera, between the Putumayo and Caquetá rivers— the Murui-Muina and other Amazonian peoples have resisted in order to preserve the jíbina or koka, the sacred plant that helps care for the world and maintain its natural balance. However, with the arrival of Catholic evangelizers after the rubber genocide, the demonization of the plant began. Decades later, during the cocaine boom, its spiritual meaning was again distorted. Despite these ruptures, within the mambeadero —a space for word, listening, and teaching— ancestral knowledge about the proper use of the plant has been preserved. Today, mambe, the fine powder resulting from mixing toasted and ground coca leaves with the ashes of yarumo —a plant and tree considered sacred by Amazonian peoples—, reaffirms itself as a symbol of strength and cultural continuity: word of life. Mambe sustains spiritual communication, collective thought, and the daily practice of the principles that guide life.

The Artist

Aimena Úai

Aimema Úai —The Voice of the Crane— is a contemporary artist, mambeólogo (coca practitioner), and researcher from the Murui-Muina people of the Colombian Amazon. Born in La Chorrera in 1996, his artistic formation is deeply rooted in the ancestral knowledge of his family.

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The House Where Words Are Chewed

The House Where Words Are Chewed

Aimena Úai

Artist’s country of origen: Colombia
Size: 165 x 230 cm
Year: 2025

Line of Inquiry:

Coca-Worlds

In Moo Buinaima Jofo, Aimema Úai depicts the communal space where mambe, ambil, and word are shared. The work translates a spiritual architecture—the maloka—into pictorial form, merging oil paint with coca leaves and other natural materials. These elements not only reference ritual practices but also embody the physical presence of plants as carriers of knowledge and memory. Through painting, Úai examines how relationships between body, territory, and thought materialize in living matter, positioning coca as a symbol of dialogue and cultural continuity.

The Artist

Aimena Úai

Aimema Úai —The Voice of the Crane— is a contemporary artist, mambeólogo (coca practitioner), and researcher from the Murui-Muina people of the Colombian Amazon. Born in La Chorrera in 1996, his artistic formation is deeply rooted in the ancestral knowledge of his family.

Read more

More From This Artist