The Prehistoric Color

  • Dates
    2022 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Locations Mexico City, Ciudad Juárez, Mérida, Ciudad Cuauhtemoc

This series of performative self-portraits explores color pink's political weight on identity, culture, and the absorption of feminize bodies into capitalist merchandizing.

I always found it difficult to use the color pink. As a teenager right at the transition of the millennium and the digitalization of life, questioning the roles assigned to me, I fled from this color, wanting to build my identity away from anything that imposed upon me values of weakness, fragility, or frivolity or anything associated with femininity. How could I not, when in the context I grew up in, in Ciudad Juárez, being or seeming fragile was not an option for survival. The obvious question would be: why does such a beautiful, vibrant, and energetic color and its association to femininity have such negative implications?

n 2018 scientific headlines proclaimed pink to be "the first color in the planet's history," asserting its origin as a prehistoric cyanobacterium whose specimens can still be found in the ecosystem of the salt separation process. This news ignited my curiosity to explore the magenta spectrum in photography, Mexican and capitalist consumer culture, its influence on bodies and identity politics, as well as its role in symbolizing the boundaries between the natural and the artificial, or the profound and the superficial. All with the help of color photography, a technology that has consolidated its meanings while simultaneously commodifying its imaginaries. The image of the prehistoric color as a 'chromatic fossil' that buries identities, but also gives rise to resistance. The image of the prehistoric color as a 'chromatic fossil' that buries identities, but also gives rise to resistances.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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In 2018 scientific headlines proclaimed pink to be "the first color in the planet's history," asserting its origin as a pigment but leaving its existence as a visual phenomenon uncertain due to its absence from the visible spectrum of the rainbow.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Nocheztli PinkThe blood of the cochineal bug gave rise to the deepest red pigments and became a commodity for exploitation by the Spanish colony. The reds that eventually faded and mixed to color pink and other magenta tones, incorporating themselves into imperialist European fashion, art, and culture, have their origin in pre-Hispanic textile culture.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Pink TideThis image refers to the upper middle- and high-class women who supported far right candidate to the presidency in 2024, who are usually consumers of indigenous traditions and arts but their political stand tends to be condescending, meritocratic or racist towards aboriginal communities.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Pink undertone:In Mexico most house keepers are from indigenous and/or marginalized origins. Up until this day some are forced to wear this pink uniform. They have historically struggle to acquire basic labor rights and decent wages from the upper-class families they work for.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Millennial Pink: From internet culture this muted shade of pink sought to strip the color of any association with the gender binary; however, it has become the most popular color in the market in recent years.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Mexican pink: During 20th century renown designers such as Ramon Valdiosera and Luis Barragan took from indigenous art a bright shade of pink similar to the dress I am wearing. Beside me is Rosa, a Mazahua embroiderer who hand-stitched this dress, sustaining her community's traditions. This recognizes her ancestors' craft, which originated the now-famous Mexican pink.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Pink like mint:A viral, classist joke mocked mint green and pink as "poor people's colors," hues common in working-class barrios. A pink-painted home (which used to be mint), however, often represents a woman affirming her identity and the hard-won pride of homeownership, a testament of hers and her family’s struggle.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Barbie pink: The Barbie movie’s alleged “feminist” plot, as Mark Fisher said, "holds our anti-capitalism up before us and allows us to continue consuming with impunity." In Mexico, ancient tianguis (street market) tradition also uses desire and commerce, but its informal economy resists capital, redistributing wealth for community and horizontal exchange.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Panted Pink: Fashion has been a motor of appropriation of the feminist's struggle. In Mexico is common to use bright pink glitter at feminist protest. this is an effort to politized that aesthetic and reclaim out symbols of resistance.

© Alejandra Aragon - PInk Branding: Mexican Pink has become the branding color of the tourist agenda of Mexico City.
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PInk Branding: Mexican Pink has become the branding color of the tourist agenda of Mexico City.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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Tuture of Pink: How fashion and technology has been tools for the reabsorption of feminized bodies into the capitalist machine. To challenge this cycle, I incorporate a speculative fiction of a future where colors like pink—and the binary categories they represent—no longer exist in the tangible world.

© Alejandra Aragon - Image from the The Prehistoric Color photography project
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I always found it difficult to use the color pink. At the same time, two brave teenagers came up with the idea of creating the symbol of pink cross for their sister's femicide. The color took then another more powerful and political meaning.

The Prehistoric Color by Alejandra Aragon

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