Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Queer Thoughts gallery closes, the third downtown New York space to shutter in three months. https://ift.tt/RHjXB8s

After 11 years, tastemaking New York gallery Queer Thoughts has closed its doors. The gallery, founded by Miguel Bendaña and Sam Lipp in Chicago in 2012, was known for its offbeat sensibility and its commitment to supporting emerging artists.

Over the years, Queer Thoughts has exhibited the work of a diverse range of artists, including Diamond Stingily, David Rappeneau, and Megan Marrin. Many of these artists have gone on to achieve critical acclaim and exhibit at major museums around the world, including Puppies Puppies, who was the first artist to show at the gallery and will have a New Museum solo show opening next month.

“The evolution of the gallery far exceeded our dreams and expectations, and after 11 years we decided to close the gallery to pursue other projects, namely our individual artistic practices,” said Bendaña and Lipp in a statement to ARTnews.

Queer Thoughts will be the third gallery in downtown New York to close in the last two months, after JTT in Tribeca and Foxy Production in Chinatown.



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Perrotin now represents French-Swiss conceptual artist Julian Charrière. https://ift.tt/esfgcCm

Mega-gallery Perrotin has announced representation of Julian Charrière, and will present a “large-scale installation” by the French-Swiss artist at Paris+ par Art Basel in October. Charrière is now jointly represented by Dittrich & Schlechtriem, Galerie Tschudi, Sean Kelly Gallery, and Sies+Höke.

With a practice that combines performance, sculpture, film, and photography, Charrière’s work emerges from his remote fieldwork in diverse locales—from industrial sites to volcanic craters, and icefields to nuclear test grounds. He delves into places shaped by unique geophysical and cultural forces, sparking contemplation on alternative histories and evolving notions of “nature.”

Charrière will have solo shows with Perrotin in Paris and the Palais de Tokyo next year. This year, he has participated in solo shows at Sean Kelly Gallery in Los Angeles, and the Langen Foundation in Germany. For that show, entitled “Controlled Burn,” Charrière set fire to the Foundation’s surrounding meadows with the help of a fire ecologist, and debuted his film The Lecture Room, which also screened at the Kunstmuseum Basel during Art Basel earlier this year.



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These 5 Galleries Are Worth a Day Trip from London https://ift.tt/WkyrA1n

While London is arguably the cultural center of the U.K., it’s also an ideal focal point to explore the rest of the country thanks to its extensive transport links. Here, Artsy compiles a list of five must-see galleries outside of London that art lovers can visit on a day trip, with interesting collections, emerging artists, and expansive settings among them.


Lee Miller Archives and Farley’s House & Gallery

East Sussex

Situated in Farleys House & Gallery in East Sussex, approximately two and a half hours from London by train, the Lee Miller Archives are a special collection dedicated to the work of the photographer Lee Miller and her husband, the artist Roland Penrose. The house and gallery is the former home of Miller and Penrose, and it was dubbed “the home of the Surrealists” due to its status as a meeting place of leading figures of the avant-garde, from Pablo Picasso to Leonora Carrington.

The exhibition program is curated across two gallery spaces adjacent to the house: the Farley’s Gallery, a converted 19th-century barn; and the Lee Miller Gallery, which opened in July 2020 and is located in a former warehouse building. Spanning works from the archives of Miller and Penrose, as well as from visiting contemporary artists, the gallery’s program aims to continue the communal legacy of its former residents.

Currently on view in the Lee Miller Gallery, through October 29th, is an intimate exhibition focused on the love letters between Miller and Penrose, accompanied by Miller’s photographs from Egypt taken at the inception of the couple’s long-distance romance. Accompanying the exhibition is the first publication of these letters. Publications like these are part of the Lee Miller Archive’s dedication to promoting scholarship around and disseminating Miller’s work.


Patrick Davies Contemporary Art

Buntingford

Messums

Wiltshire

Housed in the largest thatched building in the country, Messums Wiltshire is a multipurpose gallery and arts center that hosts a range of exhibitions and events across a complex that features two galleries, a restaurant, a sculpture garden, and creative workshops. The gallery is Messums’s second branch in addition to its Mayfair gallery, and opened in autumn 2016 as part of a two-year restoration project of the 13th-century tithe barn in partnership with the Fonthill Estate.

Messums Wiltshire is dedicated to supporting the work of contemporary artists and hosts international artist residencies. This year, contemporary Japanese artist Kaori Kato spent a short period as an artist in residence to create site-specific sculpture works for the barn exhibition space. “The process of making and using materials, set against the backdrop of an inspiring building, are some of the best routes into connecting and sharing understandings around art and creativity,” said the gallery’s director and founder, Johnathan Messum. Kato’s exhibition of paper-based sculpture works was exhibited in August and September this year.

The gallery can be accessed directly from Waterloo station, and its beautiful rural setting makes it a day visit well worth the trip. Recent shows include a display of works exploring the material of paper by four contemporary women artists: Emilie Pugh, Alice Von Maltzahn, Becky Allen, and Purdey Fitzherbert. Messums continues its focus on paper with the display of a series of constructions in recycled cardboard by Daniel Agdag, on view until November 30th.


Moosey

Norwich

Moosey is a contemporary art gallery based in London and Norwich. A train journey of just under two hours from Liverpool Street station, Moosey’s Norwich Gallery is situated in the trendy Labour in Vain Yard, well placed in the vibrant city that has a bustling artistic community. Since 2013, Moosey has shown monthly exhibitions of young and emerging artists’ work.

“Putting on exhibitions outside of London gives us breathing space to take more risks with artists who haven’t had gallery shows before,” explained Moosey’s director Frazer Bailey. Rather than representing artists, Moosey acts as a platform for lesser-known artists at the beginning of their careers to show their work.

As well as its exhibitions, Moosey hosts a number of artist residencies every year in Norwich, where young artists have the opportunity to make work in a dedicated space and build connections. Often these residencies lead to solo shows.

Visitors to the gallery will find an exciting display of street and graffiti-inspired artwork. Currently on show is the work of 21-year-old Polish artist Maciej Kość, whose work straddles fantasy and reality, depicting absurd and slickly painted characters.


Pratt Contemporary

Igtham, Sevenoaks

Founded in 1977, Pratt Contemporary is a fine art print and publishing studio located in Igtham, a village just outside Sevenoaks in Kent. Reachable from London in under an hour by train, the studio gallery is open by appointment.

The gallery has grown since its inception to represent artists working across sculpture, painting, and drawing. It regularly exhibits at the annual Fine Print Dealers Association New York Print Fair and offers works by artists including Alison Lambert, Frederic Morris, Ana Maria Pacheco, Marcus Rees Roberts, Kristian Krokfors, and Hugo Wilson. Their prints focus on a range of techniques including monotype, etching, drypoint, and chiaroscuro woodcut. In 1987, Pratt Contemporary was the first print studio to be invited to exhibit at the annual London Original Print Fair and has since garnered a strong reputation within the world of printmaking.

Pratt Contemporary’s exhibitions are held off-site, away from its studios. An upcoming exhibition of Pacheco’s most recent sculpture, Remember, will be held at Studio 3 Gallery in the University of Kent’s Jarman Building from October 19th through December 15th. Remember was first exhibited at the 2022 Galway International Arts Festival.



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Monday, September 25, 2023

10 Latin American Artists at the Forefront of Abstraction https://ift.tt/jQPtn1w

Encuadre amarillo, 2019
Beatriz Olano
Rafael Pérez Hernando Arte Contemporáneo

What is Latin American art? In a new anthology, Latin American Artists: From 1785 to Now, Brazilian art critic and curator Raphael Fonseca argues that discussions about what can be labeled as Latin American art generate more questions than answers. There is no consensus on which exact characteristics make an oeuvre Latin American, nor those that make art abstract. Still, in recent times, there has been a significant surge of artists at the intersection of these categories, working across a wide range of mediums, and producing fascinating oeuvres worth spotlighting.

One of the most biodiverse and culturally heterogeneous regions in the world, Latin America informs the works of numerous abstract artists pushing the boundaries of mediums and materials to beckon viewers to engage with art beyond what meets the eye. And while this is, by no means, a comprehensive list, here are 10 Latin American artists at the forefront of abstraction today.


Bosco Sodi

B. 1970, Mexico City. Lives and works in New York and Oaxaca, Mexico.

Untitled, 2017
Bosco Sodi
Kasmin

Mexican artist Bosco Sodi relies on a wide range of materials to create his vivid paintings, ceramics, and clay sculptures. His textured canvases are brought to life with a mixture of elements such as sawdust, glue, and cellulose, combined with pigments usually derived from nature, like indigo, lapis lazuli, or cochineal. He then applies the thick blend directly onto the canvas with his bare hands, forming unexpected surfaces that honor the imperfections and peculiarities of the materials chosen to create the work.

“l believe in embracing the accident, embracing no control. Letting the process of the organic materials take their course. Letting the passing of time shape each painting and each sculpture. It is what makes each work unique,” he once said in an interview.

In line with this philosophy of relinquishing control, Sodi is also known for leaving his works untitled to remove bias and allow viewers to simply enjoy each piece. Sodi has a solo show of painting and sculpture currently on view at Kasmin in New York, entitled “Solo Para Revivir.”


Maria Fernanda Cardoso

B. 1963, Bogotá, Colombia. Lives and works in Sydney, Australia.

Dark Sun of Eucalyptus Coronata Gumnuts on Board, 2023
Maria Fernanda Cardoso
Sullivan+Strumpf

A multifaceted artist whose oeuvre includes installations, sculptures, videos, and performance pieces, Maria Fernanda Cardoso creates artworks that investigate nature, culture, and science by using unexpected materials such as plants, shells, and animals. She is particularly intrigued by the concept of “worlds within worlds” and microscale phenomena.

Cardoso is most known for The Cardoso Flea Circus (1994–2000), an astonishing piece with real, live fleas she trained to perform tricks such as pulling chariots, jumping through hoops, walking on tightropes, and dancing tango. She represented Colombia at the 2003 Venice Biennale with Woven Water (2003), an installation of dead starfish assembled together into a mesmerizing bleached submarine landscape. She holds a PhD from the University of Sydney’s College of the Arts.


Paulo Monteiro

B. 1961, São Paulo, Brazil. Lives and works in São Paulo.

Untitled/ Sem título, 2023
Paulo Monteiro
Pace Gallery

A founding member of Brazil’s Casa 7 group—a collective of artists started in the 1980s, who sought to enliven Brazilian painting—Paulo Monteiro blurs the boundary between two- and three-dimensional works with minimalist yet gestural works. Often rendered in vivid colors, the artist’s paintings showcase dynamic lines, shapes, and textures, as do his sculptures, which he first made using found wood and now creates using materials such as cardboard, aluminum, bronze, and rope.

Some of Monteiro’s earlier drawings, which incorporate graphic details, evidence his background as a comic strip artist. Moreover, his spirited works are said to be influenced by his years-long classical ballet practice. Indeed, the artist’s canvases and sculptures are imbued with a unique physicality that seems to mimic the movements of a dancer.

Undefined Inclusions,” a show featuring new work by Monteiro, is currently on view at Pace Gallery in New York until October 28th.


Alek O.

B. 1981, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Lives and works in Milan, Italy.

Tangram (Cat) , 2014
Alek O.
Frutta

To create her stunning tangram pieces, Alek O. takes apart parasols and uses the resulting shapes to construct minimalist, geometric animals, as is customary in the eponymous Chinese puzzles. Formally trained as an industrial designer, many of the Argentine artist’s pieces draw on painting, craft, and embroidery to reinvigorate found objects that would otherwise be considered trash.

In transforming everyday elements that carry personal meaning, such as sweaters, tables from her family home, curtain fabrics, or umbrellas from a vacation, the objects themselves are destroyed, yet used as materials to conserve memories.

“I see beauty in things that have a previous life. I’m attracted by the aura of things that have a past and find it really difficult to transform something that is brand new. Somehow the transformation is a way to preserve what I feel has a value,” she said in an interview.


Federico Herrero

B. 1978, San José, Costa Rica. Lives and works in San José, Costa Rica.

Sem título, 2019
Federico Herrero
Galeria Luisa Strina

Influenced by Costa Rica’s rich cultural and natural environment, Federico Herrero’s kaleidoscopic and expansive practice, which includes painting, installations, and public works, invites viewers to revel in the presence of color. “There’s something I absorb from the Central America region,” he said in an interview. “People are just so confident with color—it fascinates me.”

By juxtaposing bright shapes in multiple scales that clash and embrace on canvases, street curbs, and walls, he studies duality—the connection between public and private spheres, the relationship between the viewer and the work—in a playful and humorous manner.

Herrero studied painting at Pratt Institute in New York during the late 1990s. He first received international attention when he won the Young Artist’s Prize at the 49th Venice Biennale (in 2001) at just 21 years old, and has since cemented his position as one of the most celebrated Latin American artists working today.


Igi Lola Ayedun

B. 1990, São Paulo, Brazil. Lives and works in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Deixa o amanhã y a gente sorri que o coração já quer descansar, 2023
Igi Lola Ayedun
HOA

Igi Lola Ayedun’s expansive practice, which includes painting, photography, video, sculpture, and sound, affords color a prominent place. Ayedun has said that she sees colors as “testimonies of social transactions in the history of humanity.” She believes investigating them is a profound way of understanding this history. Most recently, the Brazilian artist has focused on incorporating the color blue in works that explore the global routes of indigo and the historical legacy of lapis lazuli. The hue holds a personal meaning for her: Through it, she has found a profound connection to her African ancestry.

A multifaceted creative with a previous career in fashion, in 2020, she founded HOA, a São Paulo–based gallery dedicated to Latin American contemporary art, which is also the city’s first Black-owned gallery. “I wouldn’t be the gallerist I am without being an artist, and vice versa,” she stated in a recent interview.


Zilia Sánchez

B. 1926, Havana. Lives and works in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

A master of abstract minimalism, Zilia Sánchez creates sensuous works that play with curves and soft colors evoking the form of the female body. In works such as Antígona (1970) and Moon (1985), she creates intriguing topography by using acrylic on canvas stretched over wooden frames that provide volume and dynamism, while in more recent works like Concepto II (2019) and Concepto I (2000–19), the artist paints bronze to create her undulating sculptures.

Sánchez attended the San Alejandro National Academy of Fine Arts in Havana, and moved to San Juan in 1971, where she has been based ever since. Despite her decades-long career, she first received significant international attention in her late eighties after Artists Space in New York presented a retrospective of her oeuvre in 2013.


Laís Amaral

B. 1993, São Gonçalo, Brazil. Lives and works in Rio de Janeiro.

Untitled, 2023
Laís Amaral
HOA

Co-founder of the Trovoa group, a Brazilian women’s collective that honors artistic production beyond the confines of specialized training and academic degrees, Laís Amaral creates works that investigate environmental collapse and its effects on modern society. In particular, she sees the widespread desertification of Brazilian land as a metaphor for the “whitening” of its population, which severely affects the country’s social fabric. In response to this phenomenon, water arises as a central theme in her works, which, she says, seek to “wet the ways of existing.”

A self-defined “artist-artisan,” Amaral paints with acrylic on canvas, though she also incorporates craft and manual labor into her pieces by adding materials such as beads and straw to the surface of her canvases. In this way, she enhances the texture and depth of her spirited works.


Sheroanawë Hakihiiwë

B. 1971, Sheroana, Venezuela. Lives and works between Caracas and Pori Pori, Venezuela.

Huwe moshi 1 (coral serpent), 2018
Sheroanawë Hakihiiwë
Kupfer

Born in the Venezuelan Amazon, Yanomami artist Sheroanawë Hakihiiwë began making paper from plant fibers in the early 1990s while studying with Mexican artist Laura Anderson Barbata. In this practice, he found an ideal medium to draw and paint elements from his Indigenous ancestry that have been passed down from generation to generation by relying solely on oral traditions.

Still today, Hakihiiwë—who participated in the 2022 Venice Biennale—illustrates Yanomami symbols and signs on delicate paper handmade using local plants. For instance, works such as Watoshe (Corona) (2022) are made using acrylic on cotton paper, while pieces like Untitled (2018) are crafted on paper made from rice. His rhythmic works, frequently riddled with repetition, present abstract lines, shapes, flora, and fauna that reference his community’s culture. They include themes such as rituals and cosmogenic stories, and above all seek to preserve its memory.


Beatriz Olano

B. 1965, Medellín, Colombia. Lives and works in Medellín.

Detenido, 2021
Beatriz Olano
Rafael Pérez Hernando Arte Contemporáneo

Beatriz Olano’s geometrical pieces meld drawing, sculpture, and installation to modify the viewer’s perception of space. In works such as Despliegue (2021), the Colombian artist assembles a mixed-media collage to reconfigure simple objects within a cardboard base. Meanwhile, acrylic on wood paintings such as Precipicio (2021) and Detenido (2021), showcase Olano’s brilliant use of color to transform a given area. Speaking about this subject, Olano—who holds an MFA from the Milton Avery School of Arts in Bard College—has said it’s purely intuitive and deeply personal: “When I lived in New York, I worked in ochre and dark green colors, but when I returned to Colombia, color exploded.”

Her site-specific installations ignore walls, corners, and boundaries to defy the public’s gaze. “I like to change people’s perception of art, to move them so they see other shapes. That’s why I like diagonals: With them, we distort and disorient the gaze,” as she’s put it in interviews. Olano’s works will be part of Rafael Pérez Hernando Arte Contemporáneo’s booth at Untitled Miami later this year.

Browse available works in the collection “Latin American Abstraction.



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David Hockney and, strikingly, Aboudia, were the best-selling artists of 2022. https://ift.tt/Jm63Gy8

sans titre, ca. 2020
Aboudia
Christophe Person

Aboudia (a.k.a. Aboudramane Diarrassouba) had more artworks sell at auction than any other in 2022, according to the The Hiscox Artist Top 100 report. The Ivorian artist sold a total of 75 lots in 2022, outpacing well-known artists like Damien Hirst and Edgar Plans, who sold 73 and 65 works at auction respectively.

The report, which was published today, also found that David Hockney led in auction value in 2022, generating a staggering $75 million. The British artist’s dominance in auction value was highlighted by the sale of his painting Winter Timber (2009), which fetched $23 million at a Christie’s auction in New York last November. His total sales for works outpaced other notable artists like Yoshitomo Nara and Cy Twombly, who, in 2022 generated $49 million and $46 million, respectively.

The Hiscox report also spotlighted other key market trends. Banksy, who had been a five-year leader in sales value, experienced a sharp decline in 2022, with total value dropping by 73%, and the number of unique works coming to auction falling by 33%. Additionally, the market saw a significant surge in what the report names “wet paint” sales—artworks auctioned within two years of creation—which skyrocketed by 166% in 2022.

“Banksy and KAWS have dominated the past five years but that’s not the whole story. The popularity of contemporary art is influenced by what is happening at a specific time, so it’s not surprising to see money flowing to more established artists like Hockney last year, as the economy experienced significant turbulence,” said Robert Read, Head of Art and Private Clients at Hiscox.



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Friday, September 22, 2023

Nat Meade’s Adventurous Paintings Unpack Masculinity and American Myths https://ift.tt/b1ExGMl

Homestead, 2023
Nat Meade
HESSE FLATOW

Brooklyn-based artist Nat Meade has spent a decade unpacking masculine mythology through painting. Pairing an involved material process with archetypal imagery, his work examines enduring mythologies around manhood through recurring characters: pensive men of a timeless machismo, with bushy beards, bare chests, and stoic sheens on their eyes.

So far, Meade has mostly worked small, and his intensely colorful, dense compositions have earned him spots in notable private and public collections. “Hank Stamper’s Bones,” Meade’s second solo show at Hesse Flatow in New York, on view through October 14th, presents works from this year that all expand his exploration of masculine archetype. The title references the eldest son of the hardscrabble, Pacific Northwestern logging family from Ken Kesey’s 1964 novel Sometimes a Great Notion. The show also enlivens Meade’s narratives with new adventures, featuring, for the first time, canvases populated by numerous figures, their steeds, and the detailed landscapes they traverse.

As a child in Oregon, Meade encountered Rick Griffin, a West Coast psychedelic artist known for designing Grateful Dead album covers. Later, he discovered Raw magazine when he started skateboarding. Such influences persist in the kaleidoscope palettes and playfulness of Meade’s paintings today. Though he first pursued college football, he ultimately returned to his childhood home of Portland for his BFA. He later earned an MFA from Pratt Institute, and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.

In school, Meade worked at mastering his painstaking manner of painting, applying oil paint on fabric and intermittently scraping at the surface and applying washes between layers. Though he previously executed at a small scale, Meade’s works in “Hank Stamper’s Bones” are notably more imposing.

Interlude, 2023
Nat Meade
HESSE FLATOW

“Bigger paintings take longer,” Meade said in a recent interview, “but it was really important that if I do scale up, I don’t lose the density and intensity of the surface.” In Interlude (2023), which depicts three bare-chested men and a horse in a windy pasture, seamless shading punctuated by decisive mark-making imbues the surface of the work with visual tension. Shades nest and hide within each other, peeking through the places where Meade has scraped, while the textured jute beneath asserts itself. In Turning (2023), intensity flashes out from a fire illuminating what looks to be a campground, the reflective mica in Meade’s materials igniting the painting’s surface.

Horses abound in this body of work, displaying physical intimacy with their riders and referencing westward expansion, a project of American masculinity. But of the many figures (both equine and human) depicted in the show’s 13 works, only two gaze back at viewers: the subjects of Heap, a close-cropped portrait of an aquatic-hued man; and of Homestead, (both 2023), in which another man lays on his side while an anthropomorphized mountain smiles serenely in the distance. Downturned eyes on the rest of Meade’s subjects suggest shyness, or contemplation, or hiding their true emotions from the world.

Heap, 2023
Nat Meade
HESSE FLATOW

Nag, 2023
Nat Meade
HESSE FLATOW

Meanwhile, that face in the mountaintop—a sage-like figure—recurs throughout the show. Drawing on lumberjack mythology as well as West Coast tales of hippies and gurus, Meade’s dreamy figures are braving nature to seek insight from the mystical man seen in the mountain (and on a sheet pinned to a tree, and in a cave). But the futility of their task nags: In two works where Meade depicts this guru alone, it becomes evident that he is hollow, made of stone—a yawning, empty vessel on which to place hopes of enlightenment.

In this way, Meade honors and lays bare mankind’s desire for a guiding authority. Still, these paintings aim to accommodate multiple readings. “I think the color can be seductive, and soft, and say something different than the image, say something different than the surface,” Meade said, alluding to these scenes’ simmering complexity. “They can all contradict each other.” That endless potential might be why his work is finding resonance. In reality, Meade isn’t working in men’s issues alone.



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The 35th São Paulo Bienal Revives Forgotten Memories https://ift.tt/6qbIwcG

Memory burns. This is the overarching feeling at the 35th edition of the São Paulo Bienal, where collective memory is represented as both an endlessly fading and reemerging encounter within each artwork. This year’s Bienal, which opened to the public on September 6th and runs through December 10th, boasts one of the largest selection of artists to date: A staggering 121 names in total have work incorporated into the main pavilion at the Pavilhão Ciccillo Matarazzo, the official headquarters of the Foundação Bienal de São Paulo since 1957.

Described by the Foundation as the first post-COVID Bienal for Brazil, the exhibition aims to respond to the global urgencies of our times. This includes the political, ecological, and social emergencies that have become frequent tremors over the past decade—the once-in-a-lifetime catastrophes that greet us in the morning news. In particular, the Bienal seems to confront how quickly these traumas can be erased from public memory, or quite literally, burn, as was evident with the fire that heavily damaged the National Museum of Brazil in 2018.

This is reflected in the title, “choreographies of the impossible,” which Menezes described during the press conference as a reflection of how marginalized individuals live through impossible periods of systemic oppression, ever walking across a tightrope of life to make art, love, and work that suggests that an alternative to that precarity is possible. Choreography, for the curators, is a way to channel political action into the body, and a way to revive memories.

“choreographies of the impossible” centers art and political narratives of the global Black and Indigenous diaspora, with a strong focus on the Afro and Indigenous populations located in Brazil. This approach is unsurprising as the Bienal was organized during the far-right reign of president Jair Bolsonaro. Under his leadership, Afro/Indigenous Brazilians saw an increase in policing and deforestation of their lands.

The Bienal opens with a digitized 16mm film, Meditation on Violence (1948) by Maya Deren. The black-and-white film was made in collaboration with actor and dancer Chao-Li Chin; in it, we see Chin performing a Wu-tang ritual from Chinese martial arts. The film’s camera plays an active role by following Chin’s rhythm and movement. This approach suggests that the camera is becoming possessed by the ritual and that we, as the audience, become active participants in the work, engulfed in Chin’s movements.

Adjacent to Deren’s film, a quadrant of video monitors play digitized archival recordings of dances choreographed by Katherine Dunham. This placement is intentional in that it draws out how dance, often overlooked by the visual arts, has a rich past of narrating history through abstract movements, sets, and design. It also speaks to Dunham’s influence on Deren as both a dancer and “filmmaker”—Deren managed and toured with Dunham’s dance troupe in the late 1930s.

These two digitized projections set the tone for the exhibition that follows, dancing across difficult histories of oppression through work about exercising freedom through the body. Like the exhibition title, choreography in both works demonstrates a physical way of being in the body that is not conditioned upon the representation of an oppressor, or the image of suffering, to understand what that freedom might mean for Chin and Deren.

As curator Diane Lima explained, much of the exhibition speaks to the history of colonization that undergirds Brazil. “We did not want the exhibition to begin with violence,” Lima said. “While violence shapes the origins of many of these encounters [between Europeans and Afro and Indigenous peoples]…we did not want to reduce these histories to just the spectacle of violence.”

However, to engage deeply with the Bienal’s overarching themes of how collective memory can be used to rehearse and perform freedom, if only momentarily, one needs to have existing knowledge of the artists and works on view. For example, the exhibition’s representation of artists of the Black diaspora is largely focused on feature-length films by directors like Sarah Maldoror, Marlon Riggs, and Leilah Weinraub. However, it’s unlikely that audiences will take seriously the premise of watching a 90-minute film in a gallery space with limited seating, and thus, they may miss this portion of the show. If these are artists and works you are familiar with, though, the section demonstrates a nice selection of experimental film and video, which are far too often excluded from visual art exhibitions.

More successful are the show’s large-scale installations, which envelop audiences through their use of color, scale, and material. This is evident in São Paulo–born artist Daniel Lie’s Outres (Others) (2023)—monumental earth-infused installations that release both an aroma and the land into the enclosure of an institution.

Elsewhere, the Indigenous Brazilian art collective MAHKU (Huni Kuin Artists Movement) presents massive, colorful narrative paintings that enrapture audiences. These works rewrite the history of the Brazilian Amazon, favoring a spiritual and visual iconography that mirrors the visionary experience stimulated by the ingestion of ayahuasca (miração).

Additionally, Citra Sasmita’s immense figurative paintings on cowhide and canvas, made in the Indonesian Kamasan style, mythologize the terrors and tension surrounding femme bodies of color in the world and their never-ending fight for bodily autonomy. The rich, violent hues of crimson across the cowhide stand out and reveal shocking violence beneath the seemingly superficial, flat style. Sasmita’s work is one of the Bienal’s stunning discoveries.

Another Bienal revelation is the mesmerizing photo-collage installation of trans women by the Argentinian collective Archivo de la Memoria Trans (AMT). This archive of images is largely pulled from records of sex work; the artists focused on images of trans women centering themselves through personal photographs and newspaper clippings and assembled them in a way that resembles a type of teenage bedroom wall collage.

The photo-installation is a piece that I found myself coming back to again and again as it seemed to best reflect what a life spent choreographing the impossible might look like—people who lived a free life, but are not represented in public records, memorialized by those who were also at the margins. Memory may burn, but ashes mark the evidence of fires not seen.



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Jupiter Magazine launches contemporary art auction on Artsy. https://ift.tt/OKvzIt8

This week, independent New York publication Jupiter Magazine kicked off its debut benefit auction “ As Ever, In Orbit ,” exclusively on Art...

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