DE ONDE OS RIOS SE ENCONTRAM PARA INVENTAR O MAR

Carpe Diem Arte e Pesquisa Exhibition Program – Palácio Pombal, Lisbon, Portugal

Curator: Lourenço Egreja

Description of works

1 – Running on blue in search of beauty | 2014 | 2014

In an allusion to the infinite colors and incessant motion of seas and oceans, this accumulation of paper rolls covered in different shades of blue emerged from observation of the sea and from a dream of the lost libraries of antiquity.

2 – To read the ocean currents while the rain hammers at the windows of the house | 2014

“For some years–perhaps forever now–I have contemplated the beach and sea of Boa Viagem, where I was born, and where I recognize myself whenever I return there, some thirty years after I first left it. Perhaps this is why I am more interested in rainy days, when clouds cover nearly everything and the rain hammers incessantly at the windows of the house, transforming the landscape.”

  • three simultaneously projected 10’ video loops, edition of 5 + 2 AP loop, edição de 5 + 2 PA
  • concept and camera: Renato Bezerra de Mello
  • editor: Daniel Santos
  • EXHIBITIONS: 'Between sky and water’, Paço Imperial, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
  • access the work page here

3 – Parings | 2014

Spirals emerge from cutout scraps of of paper stored on rolls: a whirlpool of water is formed in the sea,in the contrary crossing of its currents.

 Photo: Oxana Ianin

TEXT

REOPENING ON THE BANKS OF THE TAGUS

(Amateur d’art: par Lunnettes Rouges)

lunnettesrouges.blog.lemonde.fr

 

After my first enthusiastic discovery of the Carpe Diem art center (currently celebrating its fifth anniversary), I returned there for its new exhibition (through December 20). It is a remarkable and demanding space, one that requires density from the works on exhibition that they may live up to the spirit of the place. This time around I was less convinced by some of the pieces presented here, too neutral or perhaps too lightweight and ironic (the work of art as trash…) whereas, once again, others ably occupy the space with power and dignity.

In one of the main halls, Mafalda Santos has built a wall out of piles of sheets of paper, creating subtle effects of color that shade their edges along with the play of sunlight: it is a destruction, a library in ruins, a funerary monument to paper, to books, a memorial to dead bureaucracies. It is also a minimalist sculpture, a deceptively light obstacle that must be circumvented and against which the body measures itself in vain, occasionally imprinting its shadow upon it.

In the kitchen, one is confronted by another work of memory, another monument: this one aquatic, marine, flexible and convex; of a thousand shades of blue from gray to azure. Wondering at the ocean that separates Lisbon from his own city of Recife, Renato Bezerra de Mello has heaped hundreds of rolls of blue-tinted paper upon a long table. This accumulation engenders a sense of preposterous beauty, human impotence and dreamy nostalgia that is emphasized by three videos of wet, foggy seascapes hidden away in the room’s dark corners.

The exhibition also showcases the interesting postcolonial work of Sandro Ferreira, in addition to the “wordplay” of Tim Etchells (an ubiquitous presence in Lisbon this year) that accompanies a series of photographs of texts in the city (graffiti, slogans…) by young amateurs, some of whom are quite gifted. slogansby young amateurs, some of whom are quite gifted.