
“How to Remember a Crime: Mapocho River” is a free performance that, through a walking tour guided by soundscapes, voiceovers, and testimonies, encourages reflection on the connection to nature, civic development, fundamental rights, and crimes against humanity committed during the dictatorship.
Each performance will host 40 participants in a participatory and immersive experience where architecture, graphic art, sound art, and performing arts converge. The hybrid nature of this work offers an experience where attendees engage individually and collectively, with the river serving as both a material and thematic protagonist, examining its pre-Hispanic past, colonization, the modern city, the dictatorship, the recent past, and the present, with a focus on its evolution.

