Section 03


 

FOUL PLAY 

 

To paraphrase Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano, ‘few things happen in SOUTH AMERICA that are not directly or indirectly related to football.’ Thus, many historical events of the 20th and 21st centuries have intersected with the most popular sport on our continent: wars, armed conflicts between various states, and regimes of exception are all part of this game. In this section, memory comes into play, for we must not forget the past, but rather learn from it. 

 

 

“WE ARE HERE SO YOU REMEMBER” 

 

When considering ‘what constitutes us as South Americans’ or ‘what unites the ten countries represented in this exhibition,’ it is impossible not to mention the shared experience of colonization. This brutal, centuries-long process involved the genocide of indigenous peoples, the abduction and enslavement of various African peoples, the expropriation of natural resources, and the persecution of non-European cultures, religions, and worldviews. As with other aspects of social life, the history of South American football is also marked by such violence, whether through racial slurs or the myth of racial democracy perpetuated through the game. In this section, which opens with a verse from the song This Is Not America by rapper Residente, we discuss these issues, which, unfortunately, remain very relevant on our continent. 

 

 

 

On the Chaco War 

The Chaco War (1932-1935) was the last major armed conflict on our continent, fought between Bolivia and Paraguay over ownership of several thousand square kilometers of land in the Chaco Boreal. The dispute resulted in the deaths of approximately 90,000 people. Hundreds of prisoners of war were forced to work on the construction of the Félix Capriles stadium in Cochabamba and the General Pablo Rojas stadium in Asunción, and Paraguay's main football stadium was renamed Defensores del Chaco four decades after Paraguay's military victory. 

 

 
 

On the Pacific War 

The Pacific War (1879–1883) saw an alliance between Bolivia and Peru fight Chile for control of the guano and saltpeter reserves in the desert zone between the three countries. Much of Chile's Norte Grande region was conquered during this brief period, including the major northern football centers of Antofagasta, Arica, Calama and Iquique, while Bolivia lost its access to the sea — a political issue that still greatly affects the country today. 

 

 

 

On Argentina (Gate 12, hooligans, dictatorship) 

Argentina suffered three military coups during the second half of the last century, leaving deep scars on its society. There was also a military adventure in a desperate attempt to regain control of the Falkland Islands from the British in 1982, which resulted in the deaths of hundreds of young men. These events had a significant impact on football in Argentina, a country that had already hosted an extremely controversial World Cup in 1978. 

 

 

 

 

On Chile (curtain device + Caszely video) 

In the second half of 1973, Chile experienced both optimism and despair as they dreamed of Colo-Colo's unprecedented victory in the Copa Libertadores and a place in the World Cup playoffs. While the National Stadium was the setting for sporting celebrations, following the military coup on September 11 that assassinated the democratically elected president, Salvador Allende, it also became a place of arrests and torture under General Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship, with FIFA's complicity. 

 

On Savani's work 

“We turned our fears into a ball, feinted to escape tragedies, heel-kicked misery aside, shouted our horror as if it were a goal.” As Argentine poet Carlos Ferreira says, both dictatorial regimes and social groups in South America have used soccer, some as a political tool, others as a means of venting their overflowing emotions. In Escadaria da Memória [Memory’s Starway], under the slogan “No hay Mundial para los desaparecidos” [There is no World Cup for the missing], visual artist Sabrina Savani evokes the 1978 World Cup and recovers the names of some of the soccer-related victims of Argentina's dictatorship. (1976-83).

 

 

 

On the tribute to black players (photo and book by Grandin) + concept of Améfrica (Lélia) 

Reflecting on racism and the violent history of the Americas, Brazilian thinker Lélia Gonzalez argues in favor of the concept of 'Amefricanity', stating that "yesterday as today, Amefricans from many different countries have played a crucial role in developing this Amefricanity. In the diaspora, it identifies a common historical experience that must be properly understood and carefully researched". In this section, we pay tribute to some important Amefrican players who articulate international networks of support and resistance on and off the field. These include Isabelino Gradín, Alejandro de los Santos, Beausejour and Jaime de Almeida (who, in addition to being a player and coach, was Lélia Gonzalez's older brother). 

 

 

On materialities and indigenous female fans 

Since 2004, the Cumbre Continental de los Pueblos y Nacionalidades Indígenas de Abya Yala (Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala) has been calling for the name 'America' to be replaced with 'Abya Yala' (a term from the Kuna people meaning 'mature land''living land', or 'land that flourishes'). This would break with the colonial legacy of European invasion and value the cultures and cosmologies of indigenous peoples. This section showcases uniforms, banners and iconography that convey these demands, such as the poncho worn by Ecuadorian team Mushuc Runa and the wiphala printed on the jersey of Chilean club San Marco de Arica. After all, all the pitches in this entire continent are indigenous land! 

 

 

1 

Mülambo  

Diego, 2020 

Print 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2 

Mülambo  

Goal Imminence Series, 2015 

Print 

 

3 

Luis Urrutia O’Nell  

Colo Colo 1973: The Team That Delayed the Coup, 2013 

Football Museum Library Collection 

 

 

4 

Sabrina Savani  

Stairway of Memory, 2025 

Paint on wall, composite siding, Posca pen, lambe-lambe photographs, and other materials 

 

5 

Eduardo Galeano  

Soccer in the Sun and the Shadow, 2015 

Football Museum Library Collection 

 

6 

Espejismo  

Soccer Builds a Community with the Field, 2025 

Manual collage, papercutting and three-dimensional paper techniques 

 

7 

Alonso Pahuacho Portella et al.  

Friendship Without Borders: The Story of the Friendship Between Colo Colo and Alianza Lima of Peru, 2017 

Football Museum Library Collection 

 

8 

Club Deportivo San Marco de Arica jersey, special edition Wiphala 

Polyester fabric 

 

9 

Gavião Kyikatejê F.C. jersey  

Polyester fabric 

Private collection 

 

10 

Vinotinto jersey 

Polyester fabric 

 

11 

Club Social y Deportivo Colo Colo’s Guarra Blanca Fan Club tank top  

Polyester fabric 

Private collection 

 

12 

Deportivo Paraguayo – Argentina pennant  

Acrylic felt 

 

13 

Mushuc Runa Sporting Club poncho  

Wool 

Private collection 

 

 

16 

Juan Parra del Riego  

Complete Poetry, 2013 

Football Museum Library Collection 

 

17 

Jaime Lauriano  

It Was Never Luck #2, 2023 

Acrylic paint, stickers, photographic print, wooden miniatures, gold reflective adhesive tape, and prints on marine plywood  

 

DIRTY GAME 

 

 

1 

Illustrated article on CD Litoral's 3-1 victory over CS Emelec in the 1948 South American Champions Cup. Caparelli was top scorer of the game and the competition (7 goals).