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The regionalization of Art Basel

José Patrício, Espirais Cromáticas VI, 2018. FOTO: Robson Lemos

With approximately 83,000 visitors in the five days that Art Basel Miami Beach was open for visitation last December, the show collected encouraging numbers in relation to sales from participating galleries. Good news also for Latin American art, which always stands out at the fair.

The organization of the fair announced that sales were strong at all levels of the market. However, the strength of buyers from nearby countries is becoming increasingly evident. The regionalization of the editions of the fair has been something noticed by many in recent years. Because it has editions on several continents, Art Basel has seen some of its patrons prefer to wait for the closest edition to cross the ocean to buy works of art. Still, visits by collectors and representatives of institutions such as the Center Pompidou in Paris and the Serpentine Galleries in London do not disappoint.

In the event of 2018, something caught the attention of the galleries that participated: the will of the buyers in wanting to insert in their collections works of black, Latin artists and women artists. This desire reveals in some way the force of the claims of movements that fight against the erasure of the artistic production made by these social groups.

The Brazilian galleries reported some success in their sales. Among the 14 Brazilian artists, Nara Roesler Gallery, based in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and New York, sold works by artists such as Vik Muniz, Tomie Ohtake, Julio LeParc and Artur Lescher. Bergamin & Gomide negotiated works by Ivan Serpa and Leonílson.

The two are the only houses in Brazil that also participate in the edition of the fair in Hong Kong, from March 29th to 31st. Nara Roesler will present works by some of the successful artists in Miami Beach, but also includes works by Xavier Veilhan, Hélio Oiticica and José Patrício. Bergamin & Gomide will invest in works by Jac Leirner, Rivane Neuenschwander, Jim Hodges, Lorenzato and Mira Schendel.

Participating in the Discoveries sector with the Commonwealth and Council gallery in Los Angeles, Brazilian Clarissa Tossin, represented in Brazil by Galeria Luisa Strina, will present some works she has developed recently. Starting from ideas raised by the writer Octavia E. Butler in the triology Xenogenesis (1989), Tossin brings to light “a post-apocalyptic materiality” that involves the ecological issues of the planet, considering “the aesthetic traditions of the native people of the Amazon in relation to the culture contemporary commodity. “ Also noteworthy for Argentine-born artist Rirkrit Tiravanija, who will be exhibiting an untitled work of 2018, made of gold leaf written in Chinese characters 吗 在 同 一片 一片 天空 下 做梦 吗 (which can be translated as “We are dreaming under the same sky “) pasted on a newspaper.

The event in Hong Kong will feature 242 galleries from 35 countries. In a move that also demonstrates some of this regionalization of the fair’s editions, the Kabinnet sector will focus on artists from Asia, featuring both well-established and emerging artists. They will be, in all, 21 conceptual expositions in a limited space and with special curation within the stands. Highlights for Simon Starling at The Modern Institute and Joan Miró at Lelong Gallery.

In the Film sector, multimedia artist and film producer Li Zhenhua has separated 27 film and video works that address the current socio-political context, including works that have been shown at major festivals such as Lou Ye’s Spring Fever, which won the award for Best Screenplay at Cannes in 2009 and Jia Zhangke’s Dong, screened at the Venice International Film Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival in 2006. In Conversations, the highlight is the conversation between several curators who produced exhibitions based on Asian geography “ discussing the format of exposure as a way to make maps that seek new understandings, perspectives and dis / connections in a region composed of many regions. “

Clarissa Tossin is featured at Art Basel Hong Kong

Clarissa Tossin, 'Old Planet' e 'Mars Rising', 2019. FOTO: Instagram Clarissa Tossin

The Brazilian Clarissa Tossin is one of the highlights of the Discoveries sector of Art Basel Hong Kong, being represented by the gallery Commonwealth and Council, based in Los Angeles, she introduces a new line of work. In 2018, Tossin had already exhibited in the Asian city, invited to display the video work Ch’u Mayaa (2017) at the Emerald City show at the K11 Art Foundation.

The artist spoke to ARTE!Brasileiros about the work she presents at ABHK 2019:

A!B: How did Octavia Butler’s book inspire you in these works for Basel Art HK?

Clarissa Tossin: The works presented at Art Basel Hong Kong are part of a larger work that emerged from my interest in the use of indigenous Amazonian traditions by Octavia E. Butler in her science fiction trilogy Xenogenesis (1987-89), where the Amazon became makes the site for a new civilization of human-alien hybrids, the Oankali, after the Earth’s self-inflicted ecological collapse. I love the Ooloi figure in the Butler series, they are the third indeterminate sex of Oankali who, in my opinion, incorporate certain characteristics of a native shaman, given their ability to store all the genetic information they acquire inside their bodies by ingestion of samples. The fact that Ooloi “ingests” samples of our living world to understand / decode it provides a connection to Anthropophagy, about cannibalizing culture as a survival strategy. I do not think the Anthropophagic Manifesto was one of Butler’s references but it was one of the links I made. I was also interested in the fact that the protagonist of the trilogy, Lilith, incorporate characteristics of an Amazon warrior (Icamiabas!). He could not stop thinking of her in a marajoara thong. These transpositions of my imagination created a particular image of the Amazon while I was reading Butler’s trilogy.

A!B: How did your gaze turn to the Amazon?

The rainforest of the Amazon is repeated in my work as a particularly rich place to investigate the implications of commodity chains of global capitalism and thus a perpetuation of the colonial forces represented in the environment, cultures and peoples of the region. But the Amazon is the repressed side of the narratives of Brazilian modernity that portray the capital of Brazil ahead and in the center. Growing up in Brasilia instigated my interest in counter-narratives about the built environment, and grounded earlier work on the Amazon, which focused on the legacy of extractive industries (incursions) and their architectural shifts in the forest, such as the Ford Company villages Fordlandia and Belterra.

A!B: What is the connection of your work with the thoughts of the great nations about the environment today?

The works of Art Basel HK address the brand left by the consumer society in Earth’s geological sedimentation as an alert for a collective behavioral change that recognizes that humans are part of nature and that we must work against the passivity that surrounds this issue.

I believe part of this space obsession comes from our anxiety about the potentially catastrophic results of global warming on Earth, and the other part is just the culture of fear at stake to justify the creation of an interplanetary industry that can eventually use money and public resources. Art Basel HK’s work focuses on the space race for Mars as an illusory way of addressing current environmental issues.

New airs at SP-Arte

Jorge Soledar, A morte do boneco, 2017-2019.

Between April 3 and 7, the Biennial Pavilion, in Ibirapuera Park, will be home to the São Paulo Art Festival (SP-Arte) again. Celebrating the 15th edition, the fair will have its art sectors led by new curators. In addition, there will be 165 exhibitors in total: 121 Art galleries, and 44 Design and inaugurates the OpenSpace sector, which takes sculptures to the outside of the building, curated by Cauê Alves.

When invited to the curatorship of the Solo sector, the Chilean Alexia Tala immediately thought of a phrase that was said to her by Aracy Amaral a few years ago: that Brazil was with its back to Latin America. What she wanted to say was that the country was always focused on Europe and the United States, without creating ties with the very continent of which it is a part. That is why, says Alexia, who offered as a proposal to Fernanda Feitosa, director of the institution, “use the fair, specifically the projects in Solo, as a platform to open ourselves to look at themselves, understanding that Brazil is so much part of Latin America like the rest”, says the curator to ARTE! Brasileiros.

The thought led her to a work in the series Profecias, by Randolpho Lamonier, an artist who will be present at the show in the sector, in which it is predicted that by 2050 everyone will discover that Brazil is Latin America. Alexia, who is also working on curating the Bienal de Arte Paiz in Guatemala, has been putting together ideas and shaping her desire to form a curatorial structure that speaks of territory through postcolonial theories: “I have been selecting artists since the territorial contextual perspective of Latin America How do we see ourselves? “” How many different identities were created, and what became fictitious? “These were the first questions that made me think about colonial ideology”, she explains.

In this perspective, the curator of SOLO takes to SP-Arte Rafael Pagatini (Brazil, OÁ), Maria Edwards (Chile, Patricia Ready), Ayrson Heráclito (Brazil, Portas Vilaseca), Nicole Franchy (Peru, IK Projects), Feliciano Centurión Argentina, Walden), Manata Laudares (Brazil, Sé), Randolpho Lamonier (Brazil, Periscópio), Alejandra Pietro (Chile, Die Ecke), Sandra Vásquez de la Horra (Chile, Bendana-Pinel) and Fernando Bryce (Peru, Espaivisor) . They are artists who, with very different ways of working, raise the questions she asked herself: “Timeless questions that are updated every time we see the exoticism demanded from outside for our territory”.

Whether in the recovery of “a religious memory and the mystical force of Afro-Bahian culture” made by Heraclitus, in the reconstruction of history and in reflection on it “from the record of what is necessary to keep within history and not forget” made by Pagatini or Centurión’s awareness of AIDS in a “personal chronicle of his way to death” Solo sector is bringing countries closer to the continent through common issues.

In the Masters sector, former Repertório, the new curator, Tiago Mesquita, did not seek a thematic or historical axis. The art critic says that the curatorial experience of an event like SP-Arte is still very new for him: “It’s very unusual in relation to other works that I’ve curated”.

Tiago chose to bring to the Masters works produced between the 50s and 80s, because they are works that “we can look at with a certain temporal distance” to understand them and also to understand the production of their respective authors. Carlos Fajardo (Marcelo Guarnieri), Ridyas (Central) and a project by Rubens Gerchman (Surface), among others.

The biggest surprise is perhaps in the Performance sector. Marcos Gallon, who also organizes the VERBO art performance show, chose not to allocate a space only for the works that will be presented. The performances took place in spaces destined to them scattered among the exhibitors. Gallon’s idea is to encourage the galleries to also take their performance artists, so the genre is incorporated as another possible medium of art, not marginalized in a closed corner. Also, according to Gallon, the vast majority of art galleries in the state of São Paulo represent artists who work with performance.

Gallon is also driven by the idea of encouraging collectors to buy performances, make them look at it as something that can be sold through the galleries: “So it’s brought to the trade show’s axis.” For this, SP-Arte will buy one of the works presented and donate to the collection of the São Paulo Pinacoteca. The work will be chosen by the staff of the institution, led by Jochen Volz. The artists Cadu (Vermelho), Cristiano Lenhardt (Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel), Jorge Soledar (Portas Vilaseca), Maria Noujaim (Jaqueline Martins Gallery) and Jaime Lauriano (Galeria Leme/AD) will be in the sector.

Far Beyond Art

Vista de Tania Bruguera, Hyundai Comission, Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, 2018

The selection of the collective ruangrupa (that’s right,using lower-case letter initiating a proper noum and can be loosely translated from Indonesian as “a space for art “ )  for artistic direction of the Documenta 15, wich will be held in 2022 in the city of Kassel, is a coherent decision and in tune with the current state of contemporary art .

On the one hand the choice is amazing, seeing that the institution has suffered attacks by local rulers, when the previous edition had a US$ 8.4 million deficit, largely caused by sharing the shows with the city of Athens, reaching a total budget US$ 50 million.

Those were of political content attacks, typical of the current war strategy against the culture, also popular in Brazil, who ignored the essential points of the exhibition, focusing on an economic-financial loss, when we know that art and culture do not give profit anywhere. Document 14 had public record, with 1.230.000 visitors against 904.000 from the previous edition.

But the essential point is that Germany has not bowed down to the unwise politicians talks and, honoring the democratic tradition of the Documenta, invited to join the selection team, eight internationally renowned experts, among them, the director of Tate Modern, Frances Morris; the South African curator Gabi Ngcobo; the director of Van Abbe Museum, Charles Esche, and the director of Pinacoteca de São Paulo, Jochen Volz. These four names point to the representativeness of the cultural diversity of the committee.

“We chose ruangrupa thanks to the ability that the group has shown in call several communitie -, including public that go beyond traditional audiences of the artistic medium – , and promote local participation and commitment,” said the team, in a press release.

This statement emphasizes two axes that deserve to be watched carefully and reflect some of the most important proposals of the current art system: to go beyond “traditional audiences” and the involvement with the context.

Ruangrupa himself, or Ruru, as it is known, made it clear in the text they released  after being appointed: “If Documenta was launched in 1955 to heal war wounds, why shouldn’t we focus Documenta 15 on today’s injuries, especially ones  rooted in colonialism, capitalism or patriarchal structures, and contrast them with partnership-based models that enable people to have a different view of the world. “

In fact, “partnership-based models” is an essential expression to understanding contemporary art, since its beginnings in the years 1960, but that often follow being depreciated by archaic models that keeps the artist as author/criator of an commercial object.

However, since Hélio Oiticica and Lygia Clark, in Brazil, or Joseph Beuys, in Germany, the idea of work was questioned, being replaced by other proposals aiming at the expansion of what would be the place of art: be in the creation of the Free International University, as defended Beuys, in a therapeutic environment, to Clark, or a space for meeting, for Oiticica.

In a text from 2012 made to the 30th edition of the British magazine Afterall, the critic David Teh points out how ruangrupa “has done a deep commitment with Jakarta, both as a place and as subject, and to its population, both as public and as author. From day one, the group has made of the city — the noisy trade and administration machine not considered source of culture — a primary protagonist of an epic adventure of collective storytelling “.

In this sense, the idea of artist-proposer, defended both by Oiticica and Clark, is clear. According to Teh, in that article, “the prodigious capacity of the collective reaches a diverse aesthetic, incorporating from the punk street culture to the street culture, passing through desk research and ethnographic context, reaching  even procedural and conceptual experiments. To mix it up is a firm conviction that the participants are agents in a social history alive “.

This proposal of consider the public as an agent, after all, is everything that Beuys and Oiticica sought, in a program that advocated such a big expansion of the artistic field so that there would be no more boundary between art and life. “The museum is the world”, advocated Oiticica. “Everyone is an artist”, preached Beuys. Not by chance, was in Documenta 6, in 1982, that the German artist used the exhibition as a space for the Free International University, and two years later held a series of postcards with provocative texts, among them the phrase “With that  I get out of Art”, making clear the institutional breakdown manifest at the time of the so-called “return to painting”. A few months later, he would die.

For the past 50 years, many similar proposals were presented, as a French Nicolas Bourriaud, who came to draw a somewhat Eurocentric theory, the “relational aesthetics”, realizing a production that also use partnerships.

However, between recent and more radical proposals is the work of Cuban Tania Bruguera, at Tate Modern, during her installation at the Turbine Hall, between October 2018 to February of this year. Along with the occupation of the monumental space, she was also responsible for the program Tate Exchange, arm of the museum’s educational department, in an unprecedented action that changed the name of the building Boiler House of the Tate Modern to Natalie Bell, named after a local activist, in addition to working with a group of neighbors of the Museum, which occurred for the first time in the history of the institution, which will be kept for three years.

In lecture on Verbier, Switzerland, (see page xx), Bruguera defended what she considers the new way of understanding what is aesthetics today. To this end, she separated the word in Spanish, “Est Etica”, that is, be ethical. “This is the essential question of artistic production today, take into account the context, be ethical with the other,” said the artist. She even promoted encounters between residents and people in charge of the Museum.

In Brazil, there are many artists who come seeking to create bridges with groups and specific communities. Some people open their workshop transforming it in a reception space for trans people, while others participate in activities in occupations, such as Ocupação 9 de Julho or even work with institutions such as Redes da Maré, an that works with the group of favelas da Maré in Rio de Janeiro, generating actions of defense of these spaces. Are all activities that are based on a commitment to social issues merged with concerns on the field of art or that has in it a trigger. The Hcasa do Povo, in Bom Retiro, borough in São Paulo has been a privileged place for this type of partnership.

So when Ade Darmawan, a member of ruangrupa, States that “an artist must be able to constantly shake the faith of the people and everything around her or him, and contribute critically to social negotiations on existing values”, is found that the Documents 15 will remain the best thermometer for present art or not art.

A detour to Chapada

Na Página anterior, ALTO, residência artística criada por Marianne Soisalo, localizado nas montanhas de Alto Paraíso de Goiás.

It was thanks to the Stanley Kubrick’s film “Eyes Closed” (1999) that a Brazilian of Finnish family Marianne Soisalo created one of the most radical artistic residences amid the exuberant nature of Alto Paraíso de Goiás mountains, 230 km from Brasilia, in the Chapada dos Veadeiros.

Living in London in the 1990’s, Mari, as she is called by her friends, was one of the owners of the cabaret Madame Jojo, who was rented by Kubrick to record one of the scenes from his film when the character played by Tom Cruise meets his musician friend.

“With the money from the rent, she bought the land where the residence now operates”, says artist Rodrigo Garcia Dutra, who since last year has shared the responsibility for the ALTO residence with Mari.

Obra de Manoela Medeiros

Although the film was shot at the end of the last century, the land in Alto Paraíso was acquired only in 2008 and construction began in 2011. In the meantime, Mari, an environmental activist with a master’s degree in zoology from Cambridge University, slept in Bruce, her Land Rover, when she was in the region.

At the site, she had two houses built on separate trees, planned and built by a German specialist, one of them 30 meters high. The view from there is breathtaking, with blue macaws flying over the area. These homes are the home base of the Mariri Jungle Lodge, a creative home and a permaculture project space. It was along with the artist Karolina Daria Flora and the Spanish artist Rafael Perez Evans, currently living in London, that she created the ALTO, receiving artists both by subscribing to www.altoartresidency.com and by invitation, which has been organized by Dutra and Mariana Bassani.

The artist went to live in Alto Paraiso in 2017 to work at the Art and Education Institute of Goiás Department of Education and operate with art in public schools and a settlement of the Sem Terra. “After five months in the public service I decided to leave, and since I was in contact with Mari, I ended up getting involved in the residence”, says Dutra. Having graduated from the Royal College of Art in London in 2014, he returned to Brazil to attend the Histórias Mestiças show the same year at the Tomie Ohtake Institute, and eventually became involved with the Huni Kuin Indians, who were there for a ritual of ayahuasca in the work of Ernesto Neto. “Because of this tea, I decided to go back to Brazil”, explains the artist.

ALTO is a very private residence, with an open stay, because it’s aimed at artists who are involved with the land and with sustainability. This is the case, for example, of the English writer Olivia Sprinkel, who will spend some time there in the coming months, writing about global warming.

However, it’s not only activists who are invited, but also those interested in the theme, such as the artists Manoela Medeiros and Romain Dumesnil, who spent two weeks there last year invited by Dutra. Together, they have the Átomos, an autonomous art space, in Rio de Janeiro. The artists Marcia Ribeiro, Julie Beaufils, Daniela Fortes and Bia Monteiro have already passed through the residence at the invitation of Dutra, and in 2019 the artist Ivan Grilo is scheduled to arrive.

Obra do artista Romain Dumesnil

“I think it is important to move the spaces of production and reflection in art out of the big urban centers”, defends Dutra.

One of the works created by Medeiros in the residence is a rereading of Walking, emblematic work created by Lygia Clark, in 1964, in turn an appropriation of the tape of Moebius, where inside and outside constitutes like same space. While Clark’s work is on paper, Medeiros’s review is with Bananeira tree leaves.

While on the one hand the experience in Alto do Paraiso is dazzling because of the diversity of the region’s forests and waterfalls, it’s also challenging in the face of conflicts with agribusiness. He was probably responsible for the fire that occurred in October 2017, which destroyed 35,000 hectares of savannah vegetation in the Veadeiros National Park, soon after its expansion by about three times. It is speculated that the fire, started at the same time in many different places, would have been a counter-offensive of the farmers.

With this situation of polarization, which is the portrait of Brazil today, ALTO becomes an experience of immersion in an ecological sanctuary that, far from being mere tourism, is, after all, another way of experiencing the most central conflicts and dilemmas in the country.

 

Art needs identity

Retrato da série 'As Mulheres de Lá', de Fernanda Feher
Retrato da série 'As Mulheres de Lá', de Fernanda Feher
Fernanda Feher em seu ateliê no espaço Pivô

The Pivô space, based in the illustrious Copan building in São Paulo downtown, increasingly reinforces its commitment to encourage research and experiments in art, welcoming artists, curators and researchers in programs they offer. One of them, the Research Pivot, is intended for residences offered during the year to Brazilians or emerging foreigners, molded according to what each one is seeking, lasting approximately three or four months each.

In the almost six years since its creation, 145 artists from 20 different countries have participated, promoting activities that allow important exchanges among the participants themselves, but also with external agents, be they art critics or the public itself. In addition, the program has a series of institutional partnerships that allow for valuable exchanges, such as the CPPC (Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros), the British Council, Matadero Madrid, Centro Cultural São Paulo and ArtRio.

In the first residence of 2018, 13 artists were participating. They are: Adrián S. Bará, Anna Costa e Silva, Carolina Cordeiro, Carolina Maróstica, deco adjiman, Fernanda Feher, Gilson Rodrigues, Leandra Espirito Santo, Maya Weishof, Renan Marcondes, Rui Dias Monteiro, Tomaz Klotzel and Vanessa da Silva.

ARTE!Brasileiros talked to Feher about the theme of the project that she develops at Pivô:

A:B When did you decide that you wanted to be an artist?

Fernanda Feher: I spent my adolescence drawing and painting, until my theater director told me: “You have to study painting”. That is how he left Brazil and studied for ten years at the PRATT Institute, in Brooklyn, New York, where I established my vocation.

But I’ve always been an idealist, an activist. I was involved in day-to-day social and political concerns. At that time, Fernanda had a painter and Fernanda was an activist. I did volunteer work. It was a division that bothered me.

Over time I created the project “The women of there”, where I was able to synthesize my true vocation, to bring stories into my work. I was relieved.

A!B: How did you create this project?

I started researching Africa and see where I could collaborate. I first went to Tanzania at a Canadian school that taught adult women to help them create independence for their husbands or how to strengthen themselves individually and become economically independent in order to work. I was there for a month and a half.

There are several organizations I came in contact with, one based in London, ORCHID, which impressed me a lot. They address the issue of female mutilation worldwide.

I presented my original idea: to travel, interview and paint these women and use the sale of labor to support the work of the organization.

So I went to Kenya and, unintentionally, to a region near Tanzania.

The work is very difficult, because awareness of genital mutilation comes up against the cultural issue. Despite this being banned by the government, traditional families wait for the school holidays to send the girls all at the same time to do the mutilation. For them, mutilation is part of the “woman’s growth.” Some women, not mutilated, can not marry or are bullied. Mutilation is part of “being a woman.”

It happens between the ages of 9 and 14, during which time the woman begins to menstruate. The custom is so ingrained that some families today do the mutilation at the moment the girl is born, as a way to circumvent the law, which now prohibits.

In other cases the midwife herself, when an unmanaged woman is going to give birth, maim the woman in childbirth. Imagine the fright!

Bringing light on this cultural myth imposes a very serious job. It can not ban and not support education because mutilation would not be necessary in development, but traumatic. It is extremely complex.

A!B: You did not tell us this story, yet we were captured by your work even without it being literal. By force, by color. How do you explain this?

My portraits are of women who discuss all this. Some are mutilated, others are girls who came from the schools where we were to listen or collaborate and teach.

I have an interest in telling their stories, their strength and joy, and not necessarily showing the place where they are victims. I want to try to bring the other side into my work. I like that, of them being able to see as a whole.

I think if I painted mutilated vaginas I would not be collaborating in anything with this process and maybe no one would come to ask me who these women are…

From New York to Paris

Santídio Pereira was born in Curral Comprido, in Piauí, but moved to São Paulo very early, at only 8 years of age. His interest in engraving was also quite precocious, as a boy, and he began to study artistic techniques at the Achaean Institute, with much encouragement from his mother. Standing out especially in woodcut, the young man was incorporated into the station’s artist team, where he already held two solo exhibitions in 2016 and in 2018.

Now 22, Santídio has drawn the attention of other artists, collectors and art professionals for his youth and mastery of technique, which for him is a mixture between painting, drawing and sculpture. He has already exhibited in SESC units in São Paulo, Tomie Ohtake Institute, Centro Cultural São Paulo and the Pinta Fair in Miami, among other spaces. Since the beginning of February and with the support of the Estação gallery, he started to realize an artistic residence offered by the AnnexB, entity that aims to promote Brazilian artists in New York.

Founded in 2016, the institution maintains a residency program exclusively for Brazilian artists, having received from its foundation names such as Dalton de Paulo, Carla Chaim, Nino Cais and Ivan Grilo. AnnexB was designed by Larissa Ferreira and has Tatiane Schilaro as creative director. Recently, it was announced that the space will be the place that will host the winner of the recently announced Prêmio Parque Lage.

During the month of residence, until the beginning of March, Santídio not only developed new works but also carried out activities around the city, as a workshop for children at the Lilian Weber School of the Arts in partnership with the Anne Fontaine Foundation. Throughout his stay, he met the paulistano Moisés Patrício, who was cover of our 43 issue with work of the series Aceita?, with whom he exchanged experiences and flourished a friendship.

 

Also in early March, Santídio inaugurated an exhibition with some of the works produced in the AnnexB, added to others he took from Brazil. The show, which runs until April 19, takes place in one of the b [x] venues, which hosts artists, creatives and technologists for activities. With curatorship of Schilaro, it was titled Between Two Skies and has six woodcuts produced in 2016 and 12 monotypes developed by the artist during his period in residence at AnnexB. For the curator, the show “invites us to imagine the collapse of the horizon, the multiplication of firmament and land when they become one.”

Later this year, he will hold his second international exhibition, this time crossing the ocean to Paris, where he will present works at the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain. The institution “is dedicated to promoting and increasing public awareness of contemporary art. Every year, the Fondation Cartier organizes a program of exhibitions based on artists or individual themes and commissioning of artists, thus enriching an important collection”. There have already been several names of Brazilian artists, such as Beatriz Milhazes, Luiz Zerbini, Adriana Varejão and Véio. The exhibition at Cartier will be a collective, whose theme is the idea of the tree and will take place between July 9 and November 10 of this year.

Sensitive power

Rosana Paulino, a permanência das estruturas

In the middle of the artistic production that emerges from the regions of the world’s colonial past, the work of Rosana Paulino has become a reference before our eyes. In the curatorial research that seeks the voices and speeches of this geopolitical pole – and that feeds the actions of Videobrasil -, its force is imposed more and more. I remember the impression I had on the artist’s early works, which I saw, especially the series Bastidores/Backstage (1997), in which an angry and definitive seam takes on the space of decorum and modesty (white, feminine and bourgeois) blind black women. Or the monotypes Proteção extrema contra a dor e o sofrimento/Extreme protection against pain and suffering (2011), in which sewing lines fall from the eyes of a naked woman figure to make up something that looks like a fragile protective coverup, but also a tangle that limits and imprisons.

This last series was chosen by the artist and curator Daniel Lima to integrate the exhibition Agora somos todxs negrxs?, that composed the program at Galpão Videobrasil in 2017. The show also included Tecido Social/Social Fabric, ironic title engraving in which Paulino joins images with sloppy sutures and forced seams to challenge ideas of peaceful sociability and national unity. In order to challenge the perpetuation of the myth of Brazilian racial cordiality, even in the midst of art, Lima brought together a generation that proposes to deconstruct what he describes as the “triple trauma of colonization (extermination of native populations, slavery and religious persecution) of the micropolitical power of art”.

These past experiences with the artist’s work did not prepare me for the impact I felt when I went through the Rosana Paulino’s exhibition: a costura da memória (translated as ‘the sewing of the memory’). It was only in front of the body of work gathered by the São Paulo’s Pinacoteca that I realized the real dimension of the artist’s production. She impresses with the mastery with which she uses a variety of techniques and languages, such as watercolor, drawing, ceramics, video, embroidery, sculpture. But even more so, the poetic and political power of her narrative that plunges into history to bring forth a painful past and its very present inheritance, whether in the form of sensory impact or through instigating associations of ideas.

Looking back over more than two decades of the artist’s production, it is especially noteworthy to realise the delicacy with which she exposes extreme issues and situations, such as violence imposed on women, especially black women, the ill-concealed Brazilian racism, and the absence and social invisibility on black people, often reduced to the condition of object of study to the natural sciences by our historical iconography – a repertoire of which Rosana, not for nothing, is widely used. Some among many examples are the delicate and fluid trait with which she reconnects to the land the black female body, fragmented and uprooted by slavery, in Assentamentos/Settlements; and the lightness of the small ceramic sculptures assembled at the installation Tecelãs/Weavers (2009), which evokes with great poignancy the pain of the dual submission of being a woman and a black woman.

Rising to a mature production of rare power, the exhibition at Pinacoteca reveals Rosana Paulino as one of the most important artists in action in the Brazilian contemporary scene. This perception reinforces, but does not precede, the invitation we made to Paulino to present, at the 21st Biennial of Contemporary Art Sesc_Videobrasil, an unpublished work, which is being commissioned by the event. The Biennial stars in October in São Paulo and investigates, through an expressive set of works, poetics from the South that relate to the idea of new communities, created by principles distinct from those that founded the national states. As those that approach a familiar or tribal character, expressing their affections in domestic or memorialistic experiences. Starting from recurring issues in her work, related to memory and ancestry, Rosana Paulino dialogues with this universe and ventures into a new language. The exhibition presented at Pinacoteca will be at MAR – Rio Art Museum on April 13 and can be visited until the end of August.

A garden of codes

Detanico Lain, Mares da Lua (lunar maria), 2018

It is limiting to attribute to the pair Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain separately a formation when speaking in its artistic production. It is truer to say that both are linguists, graphic designers, typographers, and semiologists. And, of course, artists. After all, for more than 20 years together, since they migrated for the first time, from Rio Grande do Sul to São Paulo, everything that was learned was shared. So much so that it is admirable even to complete the other in a precise way when a word escapes reasoning, although words can hardly escape the duo that dominates it.

“A big part of our production is the creation of typographies, of writing systems, we are very interested in the codes, the alphabets from different places in the world”, says Angela. The show at Espaço Cultural Porto Seguro, in São Paulo, which extends until April 7, gives the dimension of this in the work of the duo.

Now married and with two children, Rafael and Angela live in Paris and are part of a select group of artists, watched closely by collectors and institutions from around the world. The art became their final dedication when, in 2002, they received a scholarship at the Palais de Tokyo. Already worked with graphic design, developing projects and visual identities.

Detanico Lain, Ulysses, 2017

Angela and Rafael commented that the idea to organize the show was part of a garden concept, but the Japanese, not the Parisians: “The ones from France are very organized for us”, she jokes and continues: “Although we are well organized in these works, but I think the garden experience corresponds more to the Japanese, a little wilder”. All works have some connection with light. After all, it is the light that indicates the passage of time, which pervades all works at some point. And it is the light that keeps a garden alive and strong.

The first works that the public finds when entering the exhibition in the ECPS do not yet give the exact tone of what will be found in the upstairs and the underground, besides the works in the outside of the building. Although everyone has a dialogue between them and start from codes, they do not invade and do not dictate a truism. Silence Waterfall (2018) was specially produced for the diagonal wall at the entrance of the site. Based on a photo of a waterfall that the pair visited in Kyoto, it is worked vertically on top of the pixel lines of the image, triggering the colors all over the wall, explains Angela: “It is a still image that is being shown little by little”. Rafael says that the sound that accompanies the work is the original Japanese waterfall.

Another work that represents an affectionate place for the artists and that is shown for the first time is From Luz to Paraíso (2018), that traces the route between the paulistanos districts, respecting the layout of the streets and the relief of the path. In the same environment, Ulysses (2017) is reproduced on a wall, a work in which a human figure defined by words walks, referring to the book of the same name by James Joyce. In the narrative, the main character walks through the city of Dublin for 18 hours, redefining its relationship with space (the city) and time. The text that builds the body on the wall is Joyce’s book, each step is an upset page.

This sense of the modification of space and time can be felt by those who visit the exhibition, which is always bringing the reflection on this temporality. And that is the intention of the pair, it can be said that they conclude this desire with success.

Also unpublished, the work Clouds of São Paulo (2018) hides a text by Oswald de Andrade, graphically transformed into cloud formats as they are blurred, moving through the huge screen on the mezzanine wall. Literature is very present in the life of Angela and Raphael, being a material of much research as well: “Our library is a very important part of our life”, recognizes Detanico. And language, whether by codes, pixels, words or images, pervades the whole exhibition. Everything is also linked to the origin of the couple, who began working together in the area of graphic design, especially with technology, in the late 90’s.

 

In the mezzanine, the artists explain the will to work using the architecture of the space in the construction of the landscape: on one side the clouds, opposite to the box. On the floor, the installation Salt Wave (2010), being a figure formed by the word “wave”, written in a code created by the duo: “A large part of our creation concerns the development of new typographies. We are very interested in the alphabets, the different forms of writing in the world”. The geometry of the letters in this alphabet creates different modulations for the wave.

In another wall, the public faces the 28 Moons (2014), a video installation where the figure is formed by the text (as in Ulysses). In the case, the figure of a moon is constructed by Galileo Galilei’s text the first time he observed the satellite, each of the twenty-eight minutes by which the video extends forms a state of the moon every 28 days of its variation during a cycle. Another experience with the moon awaits the audience in the basement: Lunar maria (2018) is a video installation that reflects on fabrics composed of garden stones the name of the seas present on the satellite, such as Sea of Tranquility and Sea of Islands. Light falls on positions of letters, like a drop, also in a code, forming the words and opening through the screens.

To bring a reflection on contemporary issues involving a geopolitical spectrum, Detanico Lain found it pertinent that the work White Noise (2006), which premiered during the Venice Biennale, was included in the exhibition. Closing the course of 14 works, several satellite images of a space of the Amazon Forest are placed in layers, this gradually gains intrusions of a white, being erased continuously, referring to the problems of deforestation and climatic issues: “If in 2006 this was important…”, Angela starts. “Now that’s urgent”, Rafael completes.

 

Connections at MAM’s collection

Keila Alaver, Sem título, 2000

Past/Future/Present, exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo, is more than a commemorative exhibition. Conceived amid the celebrations of 70 years of creation of the museum and originally created two years ago to present the institution collection for the public of Atlanta (it is worth noting that it was the first exhibition of the MAM in North American territory), the selection offers an interesting opportunity to enjoy and reflect on important aspects of contemporary Brazilian art.

The criterion adopted by the curators Cauê Alves and Vanessa Davidson is neither chronological nor thematic. The 72 works selected for the Brazilian version, which occupy the main hall of the museum until April 21, were not chosen with the purpose of narrating or illustrating an official history of the national art nor presenting a particular trajectory of the collection. The plastic, conceptual or poetic power of the work, as well as its ability to connect with other parts of the selection, seem to have been the most important criteria of choice. This is already evident in the first work, “Notes on a Burning Scene”, by José Damasceno. This seductive panel, which recreates with hundreds of yellow pencils, the perspective image of a silhouette watching a screen, immediately arouses the sympathy of the public, as witness the frequent smile on the physiognomy of the visitors. Apprehension and formal creativity, capacity for synthesis and appropriation of unusual materials and procedures are among the preponderant aspects of this work and that echo throughout the exhibition.

As an organizing structure, the exhibition is subdivided into five blocks: The body/The social body; Mutable identities; Reimagined landscape; Impossible objects; and the Reinvention of monochrome. But such segmentation is quite porous, as the curators say already in the presentation. Thus, the same work is often linked to more than one core and often serves as a driving element between one and the other. This is the case, for example, of the sculpture/installation in marble of Laura Vinci, that makes a smooth transition between the block dedicated to the landscape and the one that presents / displays a series of investigations on the monochrome.

This segment dedicated to works that explore the power of color not in its diversity, but in its purest formal essence, is one of the most interesting of the exhibition. And not only because it brings together important works by quite different authors, such as Rosangela Rennó and Antonio Manuel. But also because it seems subtly to indicate that the attempt to associate Brazilian art with the generous and abundant use of colors would reiterate stereotypes and that one must look at the most different aspects of an art research without reducing the researches to a single central reason such as conceptual research or political engagement. Curiously, this nucleus brings together the largest number of abstract works of the show, indicating that the separation between figuration and abstraction – which marked the history of the museum in its early days – has lost its relevance today.

The identity notion, when thought broadly, seems to be the one that stands out the most in the selection and constitutes a central element to think contemporary production. Whether in the use of the body as an element of creation, or in a reinvention/investigation of the landscape as a place of synthesis of an idea of ​​nationality that always escapes through the fingers. It is interesting to note how it is present in the most distinct investigations. There’s a strong presence of works that depart from the representation or investigation of the human body as an element of creation, such as the series of videos by Lenora de Barros about the artist’s image, the touching feet with sores recreated by Efraim Almeida or even in the already classic work 50 Hours, Autorretrato Roubado, by Rochelle Costi made in the early 1990’s. But identity reflection is also present in another type of plastic investigation, as in the ironic installation Cortina de Vento – which plays with the stereotype of the Brazilian landscape as a tropical paradise filled with coconut palms – or even in the iconic series of postcards where Anna Bella Geiger contrasts images of Indians and Westerners, showing how fragile and thought-provoking is the native vs. foreign opposition.

With works created mostly in the 1990’s and 2000’s, the exhibition carefully mixes works already well-known to the public and lesser-known productions, enabling pleasant re-encounters or new surprises. In this relationship between greater and lesser visibility, another question is suggested that seems interesting to take into account: the relation of mutual dependence between artists and museums and a diminution of the own capacity of institutions like the MAM to expand their collections. There are several ways in which the collection can be seen, but – as you can see on the identification labels – the importance of donations, whether made by companies, collectors or by the artist himself, is unquestionable.

Confirming this feeling, is the exhibition that the museum dedicates to the new acquisitions of its collection, that can be seen in the Paulo Figueiredo Room. It is clear how increasingly partnerships are fundamental to expanding the capacity of museums and filling the gaps of their collection.