Linhas Tortas Curated by Diana Campbell
Past exhibition
Overview
Linhas Tortas is a multi-venue international group exhibition that celebrates the entanglements of journeys and the power of storytelling, marking a decade of Mendes Wood DM. Inspired by the Brazilian aphorism “deus escreve certo por linhas tortas”, which literally translates to “god writes straight with crooked lines” and metaphorically to “god works in mysterious ways”, the show follows complex trails (of thought and of life) that unfold when one sets off with intention but without an end in sight. It takes paths that are not driven by expediency or efficiency, not optimized by supply and demand, but rather ones that avoid the many shortcuts blazed by capitalist and/or colonial forces to better the few at the expense of the many. It questions who had the right to write history, and posits new ways to (re)inscribe profound perspectives and systems of being that were deliberately obscured from view.
While many of the 100+ works of art in the show formally contain curving lines, including the beguiling out-of-this-universe painted landscapes of Marina Perez Simão, Ayesha Sultana’s poetic abstract paintings of industrial geometry and entropy, and Hana Miletić’s woven depictions of the everyday ingenuity of human repair in Brazil and Senegal, Linhas Tortas does not take the aphorism which inspires its title at face value.
Linhas Tortas questions why a singular god who we imagine as male has the power to write human histories; the power of writing and artists who use writing and text in their work; and also the violence of writing (as well as naming) in destroying traces of other knowledge systems, such as those found in oral and matrilineal cultures. Rosana Paulino deconstructs the production and dissemination of racist theories that served as justification for European colonialism and the slave trade, including those found in religious texts such as the Bible which bestowed Adam with the power to name. Castiel Vitorino Brasileiro also gives name to traumas bestowed by colonialism so that a path forward for ancestral knowledge might open up.
Shilpa Gupta’s work traces individuals who changed their last names either to succeed, or to survive, and Linhas Tortas also sheds light on the many artists who have changed the names with which they sign their work or worked with aliases as part of their search for artistic freedom, such as Bruce Conner, Kishio Suga, Antonio Obá, Paulo Nazareth, Senga Nengudi, Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa, Paulo Nimer Pjota, and many others, many of whom employ the written word in their artistic practice. The exhibition also explores the role of writing in artistic practice, such as in the practices of Michael Dean, Lawrence Weiner, Alvaro Barrington, Iulia Nistor, Adriano Costa, Laure Prouvost, Lynda Benglis, and Etel Adnan, which contextualize the said and the unsaid in their unique artistic language.
Linhas Tortas also delves into transformational transnational encounters that have informed the practices of artists such as Pacita Abad, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Senga Nengudi, Antonio Dias, Antony Gormley, and many others. Following the idea of the journey, works by Torkwase Dyson, Rubem Valentim, and Paulo Nazareth look at the geometries of liberation that free marginalized people and belief systems from coordinates of oppression. Nazareth plots out coordinates between fact and fiction, between Palmares and Wakanda, to try to locate the condition of Brazil in the 21st Century.
Linhas Tortas celebrates how artists have collaborated with changes in their own life path/their physical ability to transform the way they make art, such as Anni Albers, Alma Allen, and Aleijadinho (evoked by Solange Pessoa). It draws out lines of artistic influence, such as in the work of Luc Tuymans and Lucas Arruda, or a collaboration between Paulo Monteiro, Erika Verzutti, and Adriano Costa that honors a foundry that they all work with as individual artists.
This show refutes a straight-line reading of the past in favor of unearthing an ongoing network of meandering lines that come together through the works of artists who markup and annotate the seemingly endless scrawl of history. “Life is a continual struggle to make sense of the world’s complexity. Knowledge is hard won, and so both spoken language and writing are ways of fixing and transmitting it,” writes Robert Moor in his exploration of the significance of paths and trails in contemporary life. Misunderstanding is a path to new outcomes; we find things as we get lost in translation and reorient how we fit into the world. Plotlines thicken as other voices and perspectives come into the picture. Our field of perception is both a guide and a limitation, bound by our sensory abilities, actions, and subjective memories; this field expands as we become aware of worlds that previously evaded our consciousness. Old worlds can only hold in new ones via hybridity.
Held in parallel to the programs active in Mendes Wood DM’s galleries in São Paulo, Brussels, and New York, the points connecting the many lines of thought in Linhas Tortas will be drawn across Mendes Wood DM's Barra Funda Warehouse, the surrounding neighborhood in Sao Paulo and Casa Iramaia. Designed by the Ukrainian-Brazilian architect Gregori Warchavchik – who is credited with building the first modernist house in Brazil in 1927-1928 – Casa Iramaia is a curved residence located in Jardim Europa that stands as an architectural masterpiece, emerging from the curving lines that defined a Brazilian national identity. The show also acknowledges the role that modernist architecture played in writing over the underlying social chaos that has shrouded the people whose labor built the country. Other masterpieces of modern architecture come into the show through works by Amie Siegel and Daniel Steegmann Mangrané who treat buildings as central characters in their work. Circulating between intimate domestic and expansive industrial spaces, the show is held together by the idea that lines of solidarity bound by commitment, trust, and friendship form a powerful, intangible currency that can enable radical change in previously unimaginable directions. Ones that aren’t straight.
- Words from the curator, Diana Campbell
Artists include: Pacita Abad, Etel Adnan, Anusha Alamgir, Anni Albers, Alma Allen, Lucas Arruda ,Silvia Bächli, Alvaro Barrington, Geraldo de Barros, Neïl Beloufa, Lynda Benglis, Huma Bhabha, Pim Blokker, Sofia Borges, Kasper Bosmans, Paloma Bosquê, Castiel Vitorino Brasileiro, Heidi Bucher, Varda Caivano, Nina Canell, Guglielmo Castelli, Amilcar de Castro, Willys de Castro, Nicole Chaput, Neha Choksi, Bruce Conner, Adriano Costa, Alexandre da Cunha, Annalee Davis, Michael Dean, Mariana Castillo Deball, Antonio Dias, Torkwase Dyson, Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa, Coco Fusco, Carolina Fusilier, Anna Bella Geiger, Madelynn Gingold, Sonia Gomes, Antony Gormley, Shilpa Gupta, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Veronika Hapchenko, Josi, Sanam Khatibi, Matthew Lutz-Kinoy, Vojtěch Kovařík, Runo Lagomarsino, Mimi Lauter, Patricia Leite, Leonilson, Candice Lin, Paloma Contreras Lomas, Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Calvin Marcus, Roberto Burle Marx, Cildo Meireles, Hana Miletić, Paulo Monteiro, Paulo Nazareth, Senga Nengudi, Iulia Nistor, Antonio Obá, Eduardo Ortega, Christodoulos Panayiotou, Lygia Pape, Rosana Paulino, Fernando Marques Penteado, Solange Pessoa, Saskia Pintelon, Paulo Nimer Pjota, Laure Prouvost, Leticia Ramos, Celso Renato, Luiz Roque, Giangiacomo Rossetti, Monica Sartori, Mira Schendel, Maaike Schoorel, Mira Schor, Paula Siebra, Amie Siegel, Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, Marina Perez Simão, Kishio Suga, Ayesha Sultana, Pol Taburet, Mario Garcia Torres, Tunga, Luc Tuymans, Rubem Valentim, Luana Vitra, Erika Verzutti (collaborative piece with Adriano Costa and Paulo Monteiro), Evelyn Taocheng Wang, Lawrence Weiner and Francesca Woodman.
While many of the 100+ works of art in the show formally contain curving lines, including the beguiling out-of-this-universe painted landscapes of Marina Perez Simão, Ayesha Sultana’s poetic abstract paintings of industrial geometry and entropy, and Hana Miletić’s woven depictions of the everyday ingenuity of human repair in Brazil and Senegal, Linhas Tortas does not take the aphorism which inspires its title at face value.
Linhas Tortas questions why a singular god who we imagine as male has the power to write human histories; the power of writing and artists who use writing and text in their work; and also the violence of writing (as well as naming) in destroying traces of other knowledge systems, such as those found in oral and matrilineal cultures. Rosana Paulino deconstructs the production and dissemination of racist theories that served as justification for European colonialism and the slave trade, including those found in religious texts such as the Bible which bestowed Adam with the power to name. Castiel Vitorino Brasileiro also gives name to traumas bestowed by colonialism so that a path forward for ancestral knowledge might open up.
Shilpa Gupta’s work traces individuals who changed their last names either to succeed, or to survive, and Linhas Tortas also sheds light on the many artists who have changed the names with which they sign their work or worked with aliases as part of their search for artistic freedom, such as Bruce Conner, Kishio Suga, Antonio Obá, Paulo Nazareth, Senga Nengudi, Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa, Paulo Nimer Pjota, and many others, many of whom employ the written word in their artistic practice. The exhibition also explores the role of writing in artistic practice, such as in the practices of Michael Dean, Lawrence Weiner, Alvaro Barrington, Iulia Nistor, Adriano Costa, Laure Prouvost, Lynda Benglis, and Etel Adnan, which contextualize the said and the unsaid in their unique artistic language.
Linhas Tortas also delves into transformational transnational encounters that have informed the practices of artists such as Pacita Abad, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Senga Nengudi, Antonio Dias, Antony Gormley, and many others. Following the idea of the journey, works by Torkwase Dyson, Rubem Valentim, and Paulo Nazareth look at the geometries of liberation that free marginalized people and belief systems from coordinates of oppression. Nazareth plots out coordinates between fact and fiction, between Palmares and Wakanda, to try to locate the condition of Brazil in the 21st Century.
Linhas Tortas celebrates how artists have collaborated with changes in their own life path/their physical ability to transform the way they make art, such as Anni Albers, Alma Allen, and Aleijadinho (evoked by Solange Pessoa). It draws out lines of artistic influence, such as in the work of Luc Tuymans and Lucas Arruda, or a collaboration between Paulo Monteiro, Erika Verzutti, and Adriano Costa that honors a foundry that they all work with as individual artists.
This show refutes a straight-line reading of the past in favor of unearthing an ongoing network of meandering lines that come together through the works of artists who markup and annotate the seemingly endless scrawl of history. “Life is a continual struggle to make sense of the world’s complexity. Knowledge is hard won, and so both spoken language and writing are ways of fixing and transmitting it,” writes Robert Moor in his exploration of the significance of paths and trails in contemporary life. Misunderstanding is a path to new outcomes; we find things as we get lost in translation and reorient how we fit into the world. Plotlines thicken as other voices and perspectives come into the picture. Our field of perception is both a guide and a limitation, bound by our sensory abilities, actions, and subjective memories; this field expands as we become aware of worlds that previously evaded our consciousness. Old worlds can only hold in new ones via hybridity.
Held in parallel to the programs active in Mendes Wood DM’s galleries in São Paulo, Brussels, and New York, the points connecting the many lines of thought in Linhas Tortas will be drawn across Mendes Wood DM's Barra Funda Warehouse, the surrounding neighborhood in Sao Paulo and Casa Iramaia. Designed by the Ukrainian-Brazilian architect Gregori Warchavchik – who is credited with building the first modernist house in Brazil in 1927-1928 – Casa Iramaia is a curved residence located in Jardim Europa that stands as an architectural masterpiece, emerging from the curving lines that defined a Brazilian national identity. The show also acknowledges the role that modernist architecture played in writing over the underlying social chaos that has shrouded the people whose labor built the country. Other masterpieces of modern architecture come into the show through works by Amie Siegel and Daniel Steegmann Mangrané who treat buildings as central characters in their work. Circulating between intimate domestic and expansive industrial spaces, the show is held together by the idea that lines of solidarity bound by commitment, trust, and friendship form a powerful, intangible currency that can enable radical change in previously unimaginable directions. Ones that aren’t straight.
- Words from the curator, Diana Campbell
Artists include: Pacita Abad, Etel Adnan, Anusha Alamgir, Anni Albers, Alma Allen, Lucas Arruda ,Silvia Bächli, Alvaro Barrington, Geraldo de Barros, Neïl Beloufa, Lynda Benglis, Huma Bhabha, Pim Blokker, Sofia Borges, Kasper Bosmans, Paloma Bosquê, Castiel Vitorino Brasileiro, Heidi Bucher, Varda Caivano, Nina Canell, Guglielmo Castelli, Amilcar de Castro, Willys de Castro, Nicole Chaput, Neha Choksi, Bruce Conner, Adriano Costa, Alexandre da Cunha, Annalee Davis, Michael Dean, Mariana Castillo Deball, Antonio Dias, Torkwase Dyson, Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa, Coco Fusco, Carolina Fusilier, Anna Bella Geiger, Madelynn Gingold, Sonia Gomes, Antony Gormley, Shilpa Gupta, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Veronika Hapchenko, Josi, Sanam Khatibi, Matthew Lutz-Kinoy, Vojtěch Kovařík, Runo Lagomarsino, Mimi Lauter, Patricia Leite, Leonilson, Candice Lin, Paloma Contreras Lomas, Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Calvin Marcus, Roberto Burle Marx, Cildo Meireles, Hana Miletić, Paulo Monteiro, Paulo Nazareth, Senga Nengudi, Iulia Nistor, Antonio Obá, Eduardo Ortega, Christodoulos Panayiotou, Lygia Pape, Rosana Paulino, Fernando Marques Penteado, Solange Pessoa, Saskia Pintelon, Paulo Nimer Pjota, Laure Prouvost, Leticia Ramos, Celso Renato, Luiz Roque, Giangiacomo Rossetti, Monica Sartori, Mira Schendel, Maaike Schoorel, Mira Schor, Paula Siebra, Amie Siegel, Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, Marina Perez Simão, Kishio Suga, Ayesha Sultana, Pol Taburet, Mario Garcia Torres, Tunga, Luc Tuymans, Rubem Valentim, Luana Vitra, Erika Verzutti (collaborative piece with Adriano Costa and Paulo Monteiro), Evelyn Taocheng Wang, Lawrence Weiner and Francesca Woodman.
Works
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Luiz Roque, S, 2017
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Paulo Nazareth, CA – WATERMELON FORD 100_ 1959, 2018
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Marina Perez Simão, Untitled | Sem título, 2023
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series), 2019
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) | Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2021
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series), 2022
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series), 2022
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series), 2022
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series), 2022
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) | Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2023
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) / Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2023
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) / Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2023
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) / Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2022
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) | Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2023
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Lucas Arruda, Untitled (from the Deserto-Modelo series) | Sem título (da série Deserto-Modelo), 2023
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Antonio Henrique do Amaral, Máquina II, 1979
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Paloma Bosquê, Fossil (bird), 2022
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Anna Bella Geiger, Macio com flor de lótus e mapa Mundi através... I, 2016
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Paulo Nazareth, fungo - liberdade -MG - BRASIL, 2010
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Paulo Nazareth, MERCADO - SANTA LUZIA- MG- BRASIL, 2003
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Paulo Nazareth, Tijolo, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Untitled | Sem Título, 2010
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Paulo Nazareth, Untitled, from the Para Venda series | Sem título, da série Para Venda/, 2011
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Paulo Nazareth, Untitled [Double Watermelon], 2017
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [jogo sobre terreiro], 2020
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Paulo Nazareth, ERNESTO BATISTA: _SOBRE A CABEZSA DO BISPO, 2020
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Paulo Nazareth, PLUMA DE AVE DE RAPINA BANHADA ATEH A METADE EM OURO Y AMBAR | PLUME OF RAPTOR BIRD PLATED UP TO HALF IN GOLD AND AMBER , 2020
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Paulo Nazareth, PETROLEO Y BANANA, 2020
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Paulo Nazareth, SOBRE LA CABEZA DEL REY | ABOUT /ON THE KING'S HEAD, 2020
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Paulo Nazareth, HOW IS THE COLOR OF MY SKIN?, 2012
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Paulo Nazareth, [ERNESTO BATISTA] casa de encruzilhada, 2020
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Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Caminho da abstração, 1992
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Paulo Nazareth, Untitled, from the Objetos para tampar o Sol de seus olhos series | Sem título, da série Objetos para tampar o Sol de seus olhos, 2010
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Paulo Nazareth, WHO IS MY BROTHER?, 2006 - 2022
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Rubem Valentim, Emblema 85, 1985
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Paulo Nazareth, Sem título [Política de Estado], n.d.
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Paulo Nazareth, Avance pela Esquerda, 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, Bloqueio a Direita, 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, BENZIMENTOS, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Bosta de Jovem Artista Emergente, 2005/2006
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Paulo Nazareth, DNA de Artista, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, DOUBT, 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, Sorriso de Mona Lisa, 2008
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Paulo Nazareth, longa vida, 2000
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Paulo Nazareth, Hoteis Baratos do Sul, 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, MC - UZI, 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [Capitão Caverna / Black Panthers], 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [ FALO ou A ORIGEM DA GERRA], 2018
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [cruz de tumba], 2007
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [cage], 2003
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Paulo Nazareth, Palavra de Deus, 2016
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [esperanza radical], 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [a serpente sobre Eva y AdaN`o], 2018
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Paulo Nazareth, Sem título / bandeira [vermelho urucun com sague de boi], 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Ferramentas para entrar na casa dos outros, 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, CABELO BOM, 2005
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [Zé Pelintra na Encruzihada], 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [Encruzihada], 2022
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Paulo Nazareth, coco, 2019
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Paulo Nazareth, I HAVE A DREAM, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo da série IMAGENS DE MINHA MAN`e, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo da série IMAGENS DE MINHA MAN`e, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Untitled [concretismo] | Sem titulo [concretismo], 2020
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Paulo Nazareth, sem titulo [fumazsa], 2007/2010
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Paulo Nazareth, pai, 2000/2010
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Paulo Nazareth, toro, 2000/2010
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Paulo Nazareth, jaca caminhão azul, 2000/2010
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Paulo Nazareth, Mamão, 2000/2010
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Paulo Nazareth, pirata, 2000/2010
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Paulo Nazareth, All power to people [todo poder ao povo], 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, kain y abel, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, A desilusaN`o de abraaN`o, o sacrificio de Isaac y a intervenzsaN`o de sara, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Zé Pelintra, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Noah encaminha os porcos antes do diluvio, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, coca, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, COLHER DE CHAH, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Dado, 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, memorial a maN`e, 2023
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Mira Schendel, Untitled | Sem título, 1962
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Lawrence Weiner, WRENCHED FREE, 2014
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Tunga, Escalpo/Cabeleira, 1981
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Tunga, Untitled (from the Palíndromo Incesto series) | Sem título (da série Palíndromo Incesto) , 1990s/2006
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Cildo Meireles, Metros I, 1977-1992
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Paulo Nimer Pjota, Cenas de casa com cacto, 2023
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Paulo Nimer Pjota, Psykter grego com cactos, 2023
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Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Untitled | Sem título, 1977
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Alvaro Barrington, DMX 2 Years in a Box, 2022
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Mira Schendel, Untitled | Sem título, 1965
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Rosana Paulino, from Senhora das plantas series | da série Senhora das plantas, 2022
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Rosana Paulino, from Senhora das plantas series | da série Senhora das plantas, 2022
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Rosana Paulino, from Senhora das plantas series | da série Senhora das plantas, 2022
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Rosana Paulino, from Senhora das plantas series | da série Senhora das plantas, 2022
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Luana Vitra, Aos espíritos minerais, 2023
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Lygia Pape, Amazonino Redondo, 1992
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Solange Pessoa, Untitled, Solarengas series | Sem título, série Solarengas, 2023
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Geraldo de Barros, “Fotoforma”, Estação da Luz, São Paulo, Brasil, 1949/2008
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Geraldo de Barros, “Fotoforma”, São Paulo, Brasil, 1949/2014
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Geraldo de Barros, “Fotoforma”, São Paulo, Brasil, 1949/2014
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Luiz Roque, Hostess, 2023
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Luiz Roque, Hostess, 2023
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Adriano Costa & Erika Verzutti & Paulo Monteiro, Lauzane Paulista, 2023
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Paulo Monteiro, Untitled | Sem título, 1999/2000
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Paulo Monteiro, Untitled | Sem título, 1999/2000
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Leticia Ramos, whitenoise, 2023
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Leticia Ramos, whitenoise, 2023
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Leticia Ramos, whitenoise, 2023
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Leticia Ramos, whitenoise, 2023
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Leticia Ramos, whitenoise, 2023
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Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Musgo, 1985
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Antonio Dias, Untitled | Sem título, 1980s
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Antonio Obá, Fabulação para paisagem crepuscular à entrada do Morro da forca, 2023
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Alma Allen, Not Yet Titled, 2022
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Hana Miletić, Materials, 2023
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Hana Miletić, Materials, 2023
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Hana Miletić, Materials, 2023
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Paulo Nimer Pjota, Papoula, 2023
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Saskia Pintelon, Mom and dad I am special, 2021
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Matthew Lutz-Kinoy, Ballet At The Gas Station and A Vertical Horizon, 2023
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Patricia Leite, Água Branca, 2023
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Patricia Leite, Caymmi, 2023
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Patricia Leite, Super lua na cidade, 2023
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Adriano Costa, competitive faggots (500 meters of blood), 2023
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Patricia Leite, Untitled | Sem título, 1986
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Paulo Monteiro, Untitled | Sem título, 2023
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Vojtěch Kovařík, Healing Fruits, 2023
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Saskia Pintelon, Fragile, 2021
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Saskia Pintelon, Heaven or hell, 2021
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Saskia Pintelon, Reincarnation, 2021
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Saskia Pintelon, To be, 2021
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Heidi Bucher, Title unknown (Door Villa Bleuer), 1991
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Mimi Lauter, Consequential Landscape, 2020
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Matthew Lutz-Kinoy, Continuity, Climax, Sense and Gas; Kirstein meets Evans, 2023
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Celso Renato, Untitled | Sem título, 1988
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Paloma Bosquê, Gutter | Calha, 2020
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Castiel Vitorino Brasileiro, Atitudes do tempo, 2023
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Antony Gormley, LEVEL, 2019
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Antony Gormley, THREAD, 2022
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Lynda Benglis, Ghost Of Smile, 1974/2016
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Anonymous (Bruce Conner), MORNING LEAVES, SEPTEMBER 12, 2001, 2001
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Anonymouse (Bruce Conner), UNTITLED (AUGUST 4, 2001), 2001
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Emily Feather (Bruce Conner), 4/7/2004, 2004
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Pacita Abad, Colored glass plates, 2002
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Pacita Abad, Tangled up in blues, 2002
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Laure Prouvost, The Octopus Body, Inséparable, 2023
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Willys De Castro, Pluriobjeto, 1980/1988
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Eduardo Ortega, Paulo Monteiro, Rua Barra Funda 1992, 2022
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Nina Canell, Tug, 2021
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Mariana Castillo Deball, Rumour, as the future taste, 2022
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Madelynn Gingold, Opal, 1972
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Madelynn Gingold, Early Green Circle, 1975
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Kishio Suga, Units of Dependency, 1974/2023
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Huma Bhabha, Snakes, 2013
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Huma Bhabha, Untitled | Sem título, 2013
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Lygia Pape, Amazonino, 1992
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Lygia Pape, Amazonino Redondo, 1992
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Annalee Davis, Second Spring, 2019
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Mira Schor, Red Sky, White Trees, 1982
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Senga Nengudi, Water Composition (folded wall piece), 1980/2023
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Senga Nengudi, Water Composition III, 1969-70/ 2018
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Shilpa Gupta, Altered Inheritances - 100 (Last Name) Stories, 2014
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Nicole Chaput, La maldita belleza se nos pega como placenta, 2023
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Paloma Contreras Lomas, Uno muere muchas veces, 2023
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Carolina Fusilier, From the series "Trazos Cuánticos" | Da série "Trazos Cuánticos", 2023
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Carolina Fusilier, From the series "Trazos Cuánticos" | Da série "Trazos Cuánticos", 2023
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Carolina Fusilier, From the series "Trazos Cuánticos" | Da série "Trazos Cuánticos", 2023
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Paulo Nazareth, Palmares-Wakanda, 2023
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Ayesha Sultana, Untitled | Sem título, 2023
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Ayesha Sultana, Untitled | Sem título, 2023
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Rosana Paulino, Adão nomeando os animais, 2023
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Rosana Paulino, Adão nomeando os animais, 2023
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Rosana Paulino, Adão nomeando os animais, 2023
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Guglielmo Castelli, Ato Idiota, 2023
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Torkwase Dyson, Indeterminacy #1 (Black Compositional Thought), 2022
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Christodoulos Panayiotou, Untitled | Sem título, 2019
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Rubem Valentim, Emblema - Logotipo Poético, 1974
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Rubem Valentim, Untitled | Sem título, 1991
Installation Views