Antonio Obá
Outros ofícios: Raiz, 2020
walnut extract and golden china ink on paper
32 x 24 cm
12 5/8 x 9 1/2 in
12 5/8 x 9 1/2 in
The drawings from this Outros Ofícios (which translates to “other trades”) series consist of allegorical representations of an entire instrumental apparatus created by Brazilian slave labor in the 18th century....
The drawings from this Outros Ofícios (which translates to “other trades”) series consist of allegorical representations of an entire instrumental apparatus created by Brazilian slave labor in the 18th century. Many of the enslaved Africans sent to the region of Minas Gerais had technical skills and knowledge of metallurgy, architecture and mining that were foreign to Brazil at the time. This creates a perverse link between the tradition of craft and manufacture and a brutal cycle of hard work and production of objects that, by their very function, afflicted and further violated the bodies of these enslaved people, from the saws, mills and bricks, to the chains which kept them captive – a whole technology focused on physical submission.
By stripping the original function of these objects of oppression, the artist subverts history and restores agency and power to the subjects of these drawings.
By stripping the original function of these objects of oppression, the artist subverts history and restores agency and power to the subjects of these drawings.