Overview

My attitude towards art is conceptual or ideological. I don't run away from it.

– Anna Bella Geiger

Anna Bella Geiger is widely acknowledged as one of the most important artists working in Brazil today. A pioneer of video art in the country, she was also one of the great exponents of the first generation of Latin American conceptual artists. Her trajectory, continuously marked by ruptures and a multiplicity of themes and methods, began in the 1950s and early 1960s. Chiefly linked to informal abstractionism, these early works prompted an improvised and spontaneous practice with a rigorous concern for form. 

Later in her career, she dedicated herself to metal engravings and the use of gouache, which activated her notorious Visceral Phase and was inspired by the movement known as Nova Figuração (New Figuration). Composed of cut metal plates, the images from this period blend discussions of engraving techniques with the organic reality of the human body to reference geopolitical representations, as though the fragmentation of our bodily parts could give rise to possible maps. At this point, the study of cartography became a definitive field of interest for the artist, problematizing notions of territory, borders, and cultural hegemony. 

By the 1970s, Geiger’s production assumed an experimental tone, which the artist recognized as the only possible mode of art-making – breaking with the orientations of the modern period and radically exploring contemporary practices. 
Beginning to adopt methods such as photomontage, photogravure, photocopy, and video, her thematic ambitions expanded in equal measure, resulting in pieces committed to critical rhetoric and strong political connotations. During this time, the artist also focused her dialogue on anthropology and the study of the image, developing her “geo-poetry” and anticipating crucial points of contention in public debate, both globally and within Brazil. 

From the early 1990s, Geiger further expanded her material repertoire. The distinctive series Fronteiriços [Borderlines], where map formations and elements, such as orthogonal lines and diagrams, appear inside old iron archive drawers filled with wax, stands out within this period. Metaphors of knowledge and memory, the boxes, dismantled from their map cabinets, refer to the fluidity with which circuits allow for the diffusion and crystallization of certain objects and relationships, fixing them onto the surface of a social imaginary. Today, Geiger continues to work with freshness, producing collages using a variety of media that revisits and explores her main themes. 

Anna Bella Geiger (b. 1933, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) lives and works in Rio de Janeiro. 
 
Throughout more than seven decades, Geiger extensively presented her work in the most prominent museums in solo exhibitions such as Anna Bella Geiger – Entre o Relevo e o Recorte, SESC Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro (2024); Circumambulatio, Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade de São Paulo (MAC-USP), São Paulo (2024); Anna Bella Geiger – 70 anos de arte, Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro (2023); Brasil nativo/Brasil alienígena, Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem (2022); Another Energy, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2022); Brasil nativo/Brasil alienígena, Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP), São Paulo (2019); and group exhibitions such as Era uma vez visões do céu e da terra, Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, São Paulo (2024); Where we speak, Kunstverein Bielefeld, Bielefeld (2024); Radical Software: Women, Art & Computing 1960-1991, The Contemporary Art Museum of Luzembourg (MUDAM), Luxembourg (2024); This too is a map, 12th Seoul Mediacity Biennale, Seoul (2023); Between Us and the Others: Together Apart, IV Bienal Sur, Madrid (2023); Biennial SESC VideoBrasil, São Paulo (2023); The Seventh Continent, 16th Istambul Biennial, Istambul (2019); Radical Women, Latin American Art, The Brooklyn Museum, New York (2019); A View from Buenos Aires, Tate Modern, London (2019). 
 
Geiger’s work features in collections such as Museum of Modern Art, New York; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Getty Collection, Los Angeles; Fogg Collection, Cambridge; Public Library of New York, New York; Biblioteca Nacional do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro; MACBA, Barcelona; Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo (MAM – SP), São Paulo; Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade de São Paulo (MAC – USP), São Paulo; MUHKA, Antwerp; Museo Centro de Arte Reina, Madrid, among others. 

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