“We don’t eat batteries. They take away the water; they take away life.” This pronouncement, in Spanish, seems in {a photograph} that the artist Tomás Saraceno despatched by way of WhatsApp final month from Salinas Grandes, a high-altitude salt flat in northern Argentina. There, in one of many world’s largest lithium reserves, the artist is working alongside 11 Indigenous communities to construct El Santuario del Agua (The Water Sanctuary), a monumental work concerning the international vitality transition.
Positioned within the provinces of Jujuy and Salta, Salinas Grandes sits 11,300ft above sea stage. Water rises from underground aquifers, evaporates underneath the solar and crystallises into salt, creating, after rainfall, an unlimited mirror-like floor by which the sky seems mirrored. The area is arid, receiving solely about 300mm of rain per yr. To provide a single ton of lithium carbonate to be used in smartphone batteries, greater than two million litres of recent groundwater are evaporated.
Building of El Santuario del Agua lately received underway and the location is because of open in October. The venture consists of 5 semicircular buildings constructed principally of salt in various sizes, starting from 7ft to 99ft in diameter and as much as 50ft excessive. Their varieties shall be accomplished when mirrored on the bottom, “when the water returns its hidden half”, Saraceno says. Guests will have the ability to climb stairs carved into the again of the buildings to elevated viewing platforms.
Prototype development of The Sanctuary of Water, Salinas Grandes, northern Argentina. Pictures © Studio Tomás Saraceno
The 5 buildings, impressed by apachetas (stone mounds historically positioned as choices to Pachamama, the Andean earth deity) take their names from Andean cosmology: Inti, Killa, Ch’aska, Hawcha and Tiqsimuyu.
“Water—puri—will not be a component however a residing being, an important a part of life,” Saraceno and representatives of the Purple Atacama, a coalition of Indigenous communities, wrote to The Artwork Newspaper in a joint message despatched from Salta. Becoming a member of him there are the Indigenous leaders Miguel Casimiro, Iván Arjona Acoria, Romualdo Fabián, Justo Casimiro, Celeste Valero, Andrei Fernández and Álvaro Simón Padrós, whose ancestors have lived on these lands for hundreds of years.
Saraceno, an Argentine artist primarily based in Berlin whose follow spans artwork and science, has exhibited on the Venice Biennale, the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork in New York and numerous different venues; he has collaborated with establishments resembling Nasa and MIT. Within the case of El Santuario del Agua, the venture is conceived not solely as an artwork set up that bridges aesthetic imaginative and prescient and Indigenous cosmology, but additionally as a mannequin of territorial and financial sovereignty.

Preparations for the development of The Sanctuary of Water with the communities of Purple Atacama, Salinas Grandes Pictures © Studio Tomás Saraceno
“We’re constructing a sanctuary, a murals that seeks to bolster the activism Atacameño communities have lengthy led in defence of water and territory,” Saraceno mentioned. “It’s about safeguarding ancestral data and resisting growth fashions imposed with out session.”
The collaborators on the venture are hoping to determine a community-led mannequin of sustainable tourism that generates funds and long-term employment whereas additionally responding to extractive economies. All of the revenue from the venture will stay with the communities, which is able to personal and administer the venture. It’s anticipated to draw between 100 and 350 guests per day in an space that receives greater than 1,500 vacationers day by day. Admission shall be $20 per individual.
“We hope we will think about extra sustainable methods of residing collectively in a world that feels more and more fragile,” Saraceno added. The venture has taken form over greater than a decade of collaboration with Indigenous communities and the environmental justice motion Aerocene, rethinking the position of artwork in local weather justice, territorial sovereignty and group economies. The venture shall be previewed in an exhibition of Saraceno’s work opening in July at Haus der Kunst in Munich, curated by Sarah Theurer and Andrea Lissoni.






