Author Archives: Eida McCoy

COCAWORLDS at Taller BoricuaTaller Boricua Galleries, Harlem, NYC I March 8 – May 11, 2024

Presented as

part of BotanicÁrte

Location

Taller Boricua Galleries, Harlem, NYC

Date

March 8 – May 11, 2024

COCAWORLDS made its debut in New York as part of the exhibition BotanicÁrte at Taller Boricua in Harlem. Curated by Liana Collective—formed by Colombian artists and researchers Juan Pablo Caicedo, Giselly Mejía, and Angélica Cuevas—this exhibition marked the beginning of a year-long curatorial investigation into the coca plant as a symbol of resilience, healing, and resistance across Latin America.

Through the work of Colombian artists Edinson Quiñones, Anyi Ballesteros, and the collective NOMASMETÁFORAS, COCAWORLDS introduced three powerful perspectives on the coca plant. Using photography, video, textiles, and everyday objects, the artists proposed new visual and political languages to address the historical wounds and social stigma surrounding coca.

The exhibition was structured around three thematic axes: Coca-Plant, Coca-Politics, and Coca Wor(l)ds. These sections explored the plant’s medicinal and nutritional roles, its agency and sacredness, and the structural violence imposed through its criminalization. Visitors were invited to consider coca not as a narcotic precursor, but as a living being central to Indigenous cosmologies, political organizing, and community care.

COCAWORLDS unfolded a rich landscape of geopolitical tensions, healing technologies, cultural memory, and mystical relations between coca, language, nature, and divinity. It offered a powerful counter-narrative to dominant representations of the plant and opened space for speculative futures rooted in justice, sovereignty, and ecological balance.

This first iteration was part of a larger research project that includes the contributions of twelve Latin American artists working in dialogue with the coca plant. The project also involved collaborators from the Colombia Studies Group in New York, as well as Indigenous elders, photographers, designers, and researchers whose expertise helped shape the curatorial vision.

Presented within BotanicÁrte—curated by Andrea Sofía Matos—the exhibition connected to broader conversations on art, wellbeing, and botanical knowledge, particularly within Afro-Caribbean and Indigenous traditions. The wider show also featured artists Gina Goico and Misla, and explored the energetic and spiritual dimensions of plant-based practices.

COCAWORLDS at Taller Boricua was made possible through the support of the New York City Department of Youth & Community Development, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts, Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone, Materials for the Arts, Ponce Bank, Goya Foods, and individual contributors.

Events

Opening of the COCAWORLDS Exhibition at Taller Boricua

Curated by

Liana Collective

Location

East Harlem “El Barrio”, New York

Dates

March 8, 2024

MORE EVENTS

Coca Visión

An audiovisual night and conversation exploring the...

Creative Workshop: Futures of Coca

Ginger Blonde and Giselly Mejía led an...

Conversation: Art, Coca, and Drug Policy

Artists Miguel Ángel Rojas, Ginger Blonde, Edinson...

Opening of the ‘Coca, Palabra-Mundo’ Exhibition at OSF

The exhibition opened at Open Society Foundations...

The first public exhibition of COCAWORLDS in New York opened as  part of the Botanicarte exhibition curated by Andrea Sofia Mattos at Taller Boricua, a historic cultural space of the Puerto Rican diaspora. Works by Edinson Quiñones, Anyi Ballesteros, and NOMASMETÁFORAS addressed coca as a source of healing, bridging Afro-Caribbean and Andean-Amazonian struggles.

Hable y Vea Coca: Documentary Film Screening

Curated by

Liana Collective

Location

Canal Projects, Soho, New York

Dates

August 4, 2023

MORE EVENTS

Coca Visión

An audiovisual night and conversation exploring the...

Creative Workshop: Futures of Coca

Ginger Blonde and Giselly Mejía led an...

Conversation: Art, Coca, and Drug Policy

Artists Miguel Ángel Rojas, Ginger Blonde, Edinson...

Opening of the ‘Coca, Palabra-Mundo’ Exhibition at OSF

The exhibition opened at Open Society Foundations...

Opening of the Las Yerbas Apothecary Residency

Opening of the Las Yerbas Apothecary Residency

Curated by

Liana Collective

Location

Canal Projects, Soho, New York

Dates

July 13, 2023

MORE EVENTS

Coca Visión

An audiovisual night and conversation exploring the...

Creative Workshop: Futures of Coca

Ginger Blonde and Giselly Mejía led an...

Conversation: Art, Coca, and Drug Policy

Artists Miguel Ángel Rojas, Ginger Blonde, Edinson...

Opening of the ‘Coca, Palabra-Mundo’ Exhibition at OSF

The exhibition opened at Open Society Foundations...

Liana launched its first NYC residency with Las Yerbas Apothecary, an installation blending library, herbalist stand, and cabinet of curiosities. The space fostered dialogues between artists, Indigenous elders, and local communities on the spiritual, medicinal, and political power of sacred plants, kicking off a public program centered on coca’s ancestral knowledge.

Las Yerbas ApothecaryLiana’s Summer Residency at Canal Projects, New York I July – October 2023

Curated by

Liana Collective

Location

Liana’s Summer Residency at Canal Projects, New York

Date

July – October 2023

Las Yerbas Apothecary was an interspecies research space developed by Liana Collective during their summer residency at Canal Projects in New York. Over four months, Liana facilitated a series of workshops, public dialogues, and community gatherings focused on the exchange of knowledge between plants and humans. Grounded in the belief that plants are sentient beings, the residency expanded ways of relating to them beyond Western paradigms, highlighting their mystical, political, and aesthetic agency.

The residency unfolded in collaboration with artists, Indigenous knowledge keepers, and local community members who cook, heal, create, and think in deep relationship with plants. One of the main projects was Comedor de Quelites Mixtecos, created with the Indigenous women’s collective Voces from Guerrero, Mexico. Through interviews with five women—Mary José Prudente, Eufemia Neri, Zenaida Simón, Margarita Romualdo, and Paulina Mendoza—traditional recipes were documented that reveal ancestral forms of communication with plants. The result was a series of five recipe zines and a public dining event held in October 2023, where stories of migration, food, and healing were shared from a Mixtec perspective.

In parallel, Liana explored the poetics and politics of plant life with a particular focus on the coca leaf. In collaboration with Colombian artist Tatiana Arocha, three artworks were presented that addressed the symbolic and spiritual complexity of the plant. The public program included speculative research exercises on the future of coca, documentary screenings about coca-growing families in Colombia, and a drawing workshop using coca, corn, tobacco, and other vegetal materials.

Additionally, the collective organized Hable y vea coca, a short film screening event in collaboration with Colombia’s Futuro Coca Festival. Held in Spanish, the program sparked critical conversations around the stigmatization of coca in Colombia and the United States, while reclaiming the plant’s central role in Andean-Amazonian cosmologies through its culinary, medicinal, and ceremonial uses. Through poetic perspectives and testimonies from rural communities, the event invited audiences to imagine a different future for this sacred plant.

Las Yerbas Apothecary was conceived as a space to think alongside plants, create possibilities for healing, and reconfigure our relationships with botanical knowledge from a situated, critical, and transdisciplinary lens.

Events