




On June 3, Leticia Sánchez Toledo opens Docile Metals and Memory at The Annex Gallery, a series that delves into the material and affective memory of objects. The pieces were conceived from metal trays unearthed on Facebook Marketplace, at Sunday flea markets, and in secondhand venues. They are objects few still wish to keep in their original state — easy to come by, hard to maintain, awkward to place. Perhaps that is why they are perfect for a wall, an affectionate wink at the days when they quietly accompanied intimate gatherings and the small gestures of daily life.
From that humble condition, from the proximity of the domestic, the series shifts the trays toward another regime of attention. This will be the first public showing of a body of work that, sustained by remarkable technical excellence and an especially intricate process of execution, opens an intimate and authentic connection with the forms of friendship, kinship, and sociability that shaped Caribbean life in the early decades of the twentieth century.
These trays belong to a tradition poised between the domestic and the industrial. Produced mostly between the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, they were made from sheets of common metals — iron, brass, copper, nickel silver — later coated with silver, nickel, or dark varnishes. A then-novel technique, electroplating, made it possible to cover ordinary metals with a fine layer of silver through electrical current, bringing the appearance of the noble within reach of everyday life. They were pieces meant to serve and to present, yet they also articulated a domestic grammar of status, courtesy, and good taste.
The second half of the twentieth century began to find them decadent and unwieldy, set against the antiseptic, glacial design descending from northern Europe. It seemed that popular taste had lost the capacity to tolerate so much curvature, such insistence on ornament, such incompatibility with the new domestic cult of efficiency.
And yet they survived as memory, as a hesitant homage to who we once were and to the overflowing time we once enjoyed as if it were inexhaustible. One day they slipped behind glass and there they remained, visible, intact, and ignored, condemned to a discreet form of abandonment, in an ambiguous zone between affection and encumbrance. The newer generations, drilled in haste, efficiency, and performance, hurry to find those melancholy spirits who still understand leisure, contemplation, and the pleasure of tending to the useless, so they can hand the pieces over and be rid of them without guilt.
It is here that the trays and Leticia — a rare blend of sensibility and drive — meet at a bittersweet crossroads.
It bears mentioning because this series is inseparable from the memory of someone the family's innermost circle considered a cherished friend. Rafael Valdés was a Cuban surgeon, photographer, collector of art and antiques, an aesthete through and through, who died tragically last December. More than fifteen years ago, Rafaelito offered Leticia, just graduated as a graphic designer from Havana's Higher Institute of Design, a small silver tray to paint something on. As she herself has told it, she did not think it over much. She painted a nude in a few hours and returned the piece still wet.
"Fate willed that it return to me, drenched in sorrow and grief," she wrote upon learning the news. In that sorrowful return this series began to take shape, and it will very soon reach Cincinnati, Ohio.
Although the polished trays are an unusual support, the Leticia of recent years is fully present in them. An artist with absolute command of her craft, who corrects little, who already works from the psychological and symbolic coordinates of each piece. This is what we tend to call artistic maturity, and at times it is also the threshold of undeniable masterworks. I use a somewhat archaic phrasing on purpose, because in this series, which I find charming — another adjective exposed to the discredit of the anachronistic — winds from very dissimilar times come into contact. Wide hours, endless days, eras when the emotional occupied a place far above that of our savage contemporary pragmatism.



A few months ago I wondered in these pages what Macron was getting out of lending the Bayeux Tapestry to the English. Forty thousand French citizens signed a petition to block it, citing textile fragility and, I suspect, a touch of cross-Channel rancour as well. The other question remained: what would the British Museum get out of it.


The photography of Daniel Regan
