Thursday, 30 October 2008

frieze/strina/lucas - and why it can still be worth it



Installation view, Courtesy Galeria Luisa Strina, São Paulo

As I entered the big white tent in Regents Park, nothing seemed different than before. It was Frieze week in London and the big opening day had arrived.
Collectors – check! Galleries – Check! Curators – Check! Artworks – Check! Everything was in place. Everyone was present.
The 8000 people that strolled around the various booths, drinking their cocktails, gave the impression that everything was just like any of the fair’s past four editions. Effectively, the “credit crunch” seemed far away from this scenery.

In the midst of this social gathering, something rather discreet came to my attention; it was Renata Lucas’ window piece at Galeria Luisa Strina. Going through the booth’s entrance two glass structures in rectangular shape boxes were built into the wall on each side, forming two different sized parts of the same window. Inside of them the artist placed beautiful see through white curtains and a plant. So, when entering the booth, it felt almost as if entering someone’s home – the window becoming an element of the architectural design of the space.
The artist appropriated the booth to play with the notion of creating new environments within the existing ones, as she so often does in her works. Lucas achieves this in very subtle ways, leaving the passer-by to wonder if it was already there, if it is an artwork or maybe just ornament, if you are supposed or not to touch, smell, feel.
What is definitely interesting in this specific work is the way in which she plays with the social and architectural structure of a fair booth, making it something different from what it normally is supposed to be, transforming its regular circumstance of being a commercial white cube with an agglomerate of works, to a new condition, that of a white cube with a glass window garden structure within it.

Coming back to Frieze on the second day, the inevitable happened. Wandering through the fair, the difference to past years was after all undoubtedly noticeable.
In a “normal” year, when entering the space of any of the “hype” galleries of the moment, it would be practically an impossible task to get some, if any, attention from one of the three, four, sometimes even five staff, who would be always busy with ten thousand different requests from upcoming collectors. Now, as in other times, these people were there, but their condition had changed dramatically - chitchatting to each other, waiting for time to pass, as if it were the last Sunday of the venue.

Maybe, in a sense, we’re back to reality and back to art as what it really should be about. One thing is for sure, Luisa Strina’s space, always strategically positioned in the middle of this art jungle called the art fair, seems to, in some way, continuously rescue art from falling into any kind of 21st century cliché.

O Anzol @ Radio Macau


L. está de volta depois de atribulados meses de trabalho... e volta em grande com um clip SENSACIONAL!!!

Monday, 14 July 2008

Associacao Ines Botelho

Leiam abaixo, visitem o site da associacao e ajudem se puderem!
Estas iniciativas sao impressionantes. Por causa desta menina o numero de dadores de medula óssea em Portugal cresceu de 1.700 para 20.000. Impressionante!



"E se eu te dissesse como salvar uma vida, fá-lo-ias?

Já imaginaste se, de entre os milhares de pessoas que morrem diariamente, tu pudesses salvar uma? E se um amigo teu pudesse salvar outra? E se cada um de nós salvasse alguém? Admito que é ousado e talvez até pretensioso pensar que é assim tão fácil, mas... é mesmo fácil! É só preciso saber como...

Olá! Chamo-me Diogo Botelho, tenho apenas 18 anos mas quero fazer-te uma proposta que tenho a certeza te vai interessar:

Já ouviste falar em leucemia? E em transplantes de medula óssea?"... http://www.associacaoinesbotelho.pt/

Monday, 23 June 2008

SEVEN YEARS AGO...
HÁ SETE ANOS ATRÁS...



Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Rachel Corrie



Segue a história de Rachel Corrie que foi assasinada por um bulldozer Israelita em 2003 aos 23 anos.
Tenho esta ideia de que queremos todos mudar o mundo sentados no nosso sofá, mas a verdade é que é preciso sair e conhecer o mundo para poder ve-lo com outros olhos e tentar mudar qualquer coisa seja. A história dela é mesmo inspiradora e fascinante. Se todos pensassemos da mesma maneira que ela viveriamos de certeza num lugar muito mais justo e melhor.



Rachel Corrie (April 10, 1979 – March 16, 2003) was an American member of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM) who traveled to the Gaza Strip during the Second Intifada. She was killed by a Caterpillar D9 armoured bulldozer operated by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) during a protest against the destruction of Palestinian homes by the IDF in the Gaza Strip.[1] The details of the events surrounding Corrie's death are disputed; an Israeli military investigation ruled the death was an accident, while some of the ISM activists present at the scene allege Corrie was run over deliberately. ISM members have also stated that the driver lost sight of Corrie before she was injured, or did not see her at all.

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Pop corn and Cell Phones: Surreal!


Se for verdade, dá muito que pensar...