Artist collectives reflect the spirit of the time
Both the choice of five collectives as nominees for the Turner Prize, in 2021, and the announcement of 14 collectives as the first participants...
Letter to Sidney Amaral
In the context of holding the exhibition "Viver até o fim o que me cabe! - Sidney Amaral: aproximação", at Sesc Jundiaí, artist and curator Daniel Lima writes a correspondence directed to the São Paulo artist, who died in 2017
The transitory character of things
Active since the 1980s, Carlito Carvalhosa demonstrated a permanent desire to subtly transform our apprehension of what surrounds us; artist passed early, at the age of 59, and leaves an important legacy of interventions in national and international institutions
Joseph Beuys and the abandonment of art
One of the most radical and influential artists of the second half of the 20th century, an inescapable reference for contemporary production, would complete 100 years in 2021; arte!brasileiros publishes text that analyzes different moments and works of the german artist’s trajectory
Galleries Curate: a new way of creating a market
In the troubled context caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, a collaborative platform brings together more than 20 galleries and proposes exhibitions that take place simultaneously in various corners of the world
What happens when we unmake the world?
Works by Peter van Agtmael, Steve McQueen and Emily Jacir reflect on conflict and preclude our oblivion of war’s cruel consequences
O que acontece quando nós desfazemos o mundo?
Trabalhos de Peter van Agtmael, Steve McQueen e Emily Jacir refletem sobre conflito e não nos deixam esquecer de suas consequências cruéis
Colaboradores da edição #55
Veja quem são alguns dos colaboradores da edição #55 da arte!brasileiros
Coletivos de artistas refletem espírito do tempo
Tanto a escolha de cinco coletivos como indicados para o Turner Prize, em 2021, como o anúncio de 14 coletivos como primeiros participantes da...
Maxwell Alexandre: ‘Pardo é Papel’ ou a grandeza épica de um...
Apresentada no Instituto Tomie Ohtake após passar por Lyon, Porto Alegre e Rio, mostra de Maxwell Alexandre retrata com caráter grandioso, consagrador e histórico pessoas negras em situações do dia a dia