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Delcy Morelos Conjures a Sacred Experience With Soil

01.23.24 | By
Delcy Morelos Conjures a Sacred Experience With Soil

In a dimly-lit room, the subtle scent of cinnamon and clove infuses the air from two unbelievable dirt installations. On view at Dia Chelsea through July 2024, artist Delcy Morelos presents El abrazo, an exhibition of two site-specific sculptures that invite a sacred connection to soil that may be the most surprising and satisfying experience with art in New York at the moment.

A pathway into black dirt room

Delcy Morelos, Cielo terrenal (Earthly Eaven, detaill), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

The first room holds a work titled Cielo terrenal” (Heavenly Earth) – a massive room blanketed with black soil, arranged objects, and the pervasive aroma of cinnamon and cloves. A central clean pathway invites visitors to walk deeper into the room towards a greater darkness.

Geometric shapes under blanket of dark soil

Delcy Morelos, Cielo terrenal (Earthly Eaven, detaill), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

The soil itself was brought in from Hudson Valley’s Black Dirt Region. Its natural inky hue is due to the extreme fertility of the region’s soil, inviting some of the most nutrient-rich earth in the country into Manhattan’s concrete jungle. A further reminder of nature’s power and potential, Morelos has applied the soil mixture up the walls about three feet, marking the exact level of floodwaters during Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

Black ceramics in shape of seed pods on bed of dark soil

Delcy Morelos, Cielo terrenal (Earthly Eaven, detaill), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

The objects on the floor are sourced from two locations: materials pulled from the Dia Art Foundation’s dumpsters at their Beacon location and ceramic seed-like forms made in Colombia using an ancestral open-fire technique. All together it feels like hovering above an alien landscape at dusk – a surreal experience that inspires fascination with the materials from our own planet.

sacks of wood under blanket of black soil

Delcy Morelos, Cielo terrenal (Earthly Eaven, detaill), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

The second room holds a gigantic earth work titled El abrazo (The Embrace). The ziggurat-like soil structure appears to levitate off the floor as it consumes the rafters, covered with thousands of pieces of hay, each inserted individually by hand. The installation took two months.

Massive earth form in sunlit space

Delcy Morelos, El abrazo (The Embrace, detail), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

For this work, Morelos encourages visitors to gently touch the surface. Made with a mixture that includes dirt from Manhattan roof gardens, a light respectful touch results in a transfer of auburn dust to your fingertips.

a towering wall of hay-pierced soil

Delcy Morelos, El abrazo (The Embrace, detail), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

Artist Delcy Morelos places an individual blade of hay

Delcy Morelos during the installation of El abrazo (The Embrace), 2023, at Dia Chelsea, New York.

This too, includes ingredients that produce a unique and sustained scent in the air. Here, cinnamon and cloves join “copaiba,” a medicinal tree extract commonly used in the Amazon. The aroma is difficult to describe – pleasant, warm, comforting, and seems to elicit a different memory for every person who enters.

The entrance to soil hallway

Delcy Morelos, El abrazo (The Embrace, detail), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

Artist Delcy Morelos' "El abrazo" envelops a wood rafter

Delcy Morelos, El abrazo (The Embrace, detail), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

In the back, a V-shaped hallway is a joyous surprise – inviting visitors to walk between two narrowing walls that compress the air, your sense of scale, and the intensity of aroma. The experience is far more comforting than claustrophobic – a moment of connection, respect, and wonder that, if your experience is anything like mine, will change your relationship with dirt long after your visit.

Delcy Morelos’ El abrazo (The Embrace) is on view through July 2024 and highly recommended for returning visits.

Two visitors wall between dirt walls

Delcy Morelos, El abrazo (The Embrace, detail), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

Soil form appears to levitate above concrete floor

Delcy Morelos, El abrazo (The Embrace, detail), 2023. Installation view, Dia Chelsea, New York, 2023.

Artist Delcy Morelos places an individual blade of hay

Delcy Morelos during the installation of El abrazo (The Embrace), 2023, at Dia Chelsea, New York.

What: Delcy Morelos: El abrazo
Where: Dia Chelsea, 537 W 22nd St, New York
When: October 5, 2023 – July 2024. Open Wednesdays-Sundays from 12-6pm.

All images © Delcy Morelos; Photography by Don Stahl

David Behringer visits over 200 galleries every month to uncover and share the most exciting contemporary art in New York today. Subscribe to his exclusive weekly newsletter at www.thetwopercent.com and learn about his private gallery tours. And be sure to check out his YouTube.