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'Art from Brazil in New York.'


Twenty-five years ago, on the occasion of the Museum of Modern Art's landmark international exhibition "Information," Cildo Meireles Cildo Meireles (born Rio de Janeiro, 1948) is a Brazilian installation artist and sculptor.

A retrospective of his work, organized by Dan Cameron and Gerardo Mosquera, was presented at the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York in 1999 and then traveled to the Museu de
 declared "I am here in this exhibition to defend neither a career nor any nationality," a sentiment echoed by his fellow artist Helio Oiticica, who proclaimed "I am not here representing Brazil, or representing anything else." Today these statements evoke a bygone era of internationalism: the reduction of artistic substance to the trope trope  
n.
1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor.

2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies.
 of "information" implied a logic of universal equivalence in the esthetic es·thet·ic
adj.
Variant of aesthetic.
 realm that promised an easy traversal of political and cultural borders. To be seen as representing some particular collectivity was to be doomed to marginalization mar·gin·al·ize  
tr.v. mar·gin·al·ized, mar·gin·al·iz·ing, mar·gin·al·iz·es
To relegate or confine to a lower or outer limit or edge, as of social standing.
. Naturally this was exactly what happened. Neither Meireles' nor Oiticica's work would be exhibited again in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 until 1988, and then only in exhibitions that straight-forwardly declared their "representative" ambitions: "Brazil Projects" at P.S. 1 and "The Latin American Spirit" at the Bronx Museum. (Meireles was also included that year in another exhibition, "The Debt," at Exit Art.) The most recent venture into this arena, "Art from Brazil in New York" (January/February 1995), was accompanied by a catalogue that cited Meireles' and Oiticica's proudly defiant assertions; twenty-five years later the evident untruth of these declarations fills them with pathos.

All this goes to underline the fact that if art from Brazil has begun to gain a toe-hold in New York in recent years, it has been very much in a context inflected in·flect  
v. in·flect·ed, in·flect·ing, in·flects

v.tr.
1. To alter (the voice) in tone or pitch; modulate.

2. Grammar To alter (a word) by inflection.

3.
 by an identity politics that, in only a seeming paradox, is also a politics of difference. Like a number of similar ventures in the past few years ("Art Israel: The 1980s," 1986; "Parallel Project," [Mexican art], 1991; "The Argentine Project," 1991-92), "Art from Brazil in New York" was not a museum survey but an attempt on the part of the Brazilian government to promote a nation's art through a series of coordinated exhibitions in private galleries and alternative spaces. Such efforts betray mixed intentions: the desire both to promote the image of the country and to insinuate in·sin·u·ate  
v. in·sin·u·at·ed, in·sin·u·at·ing, in·sin·u·ates

v.tr.
1. To introduce or otherwise convey (a thought, for example) gradually and insidiously. See Synonyms at suggest.

2.
 selected artists as individual exhibitors in the gallery system - to play up local identity yet to assimilate. Above all, they reflect the belief that there is an art world whose center is stable and coherent enough to confer "recognition."

Does it work? Past experience suggests that little of the art imported this way will make any lasting impact, no matter how significant some of the artists may be. This failure may have something to do with the way such projects benefit neither from the comprehensiveness of a museum survey nor from a gallery's sustained investment in a single artist's career. For instance, though Oiticica was accorded a retrospective
''For the KRS-One album, see A Retrospective (album)
Another European Lou Reed compilation. Track listing
  1. "I Can't Stand It"
  2. "Walk on the Wild Side"
  3. "Satellite of Love"
  4. "Vicious"
  5. "Caroline Says I"
  6. "Sweet Jane" [Live]
 at Minneapolis' Walker Art Center two years ago, his piece at the Marian Goodman Gallery, Cosmococa CC5 Hendrix: War, 1973 (created in collaboration with the filmmaker Neville d'Almeida), did little to suggest why. More revealing of the roots of contemporary Brazilian art was the other presentation of a past master at the Drawing Center: the remarkable selection of works on paper ("Objetos graficos" [Graphic objects]) by Mira Schendel, who worked with both subjective gesture and readymade form - drawn line and typography - in dazzling ways. The work with typography in particular suggests the connection of this Swiss-born artist to Constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended) , reminding us of the peculiar trajectory that begins with Max Bill, of all people, and the first Sao Paulo Bienal, and ends with the emergence in Brazil (as in Argentina) of a vital Concrete art movement. With Oiticica and Lygia Clark (the latter unaccountably un·ac·count·a·ble  
adj.
1. Impossible to account for; inexplicable: unaccountable absences.

2.
 excluded from the recent Brazilian exhibitions in New York), this would develop into the Neo-Concretism of the early '60s, anticipating extensions of artistic practice into the social sphere that would later occur in European and North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 movements such as arte povera.

Of course, "Art from Brazil in New York" in no way pretended to give such historical background, though Oiticica's Cosmococa did begin to suggest a lineage in which to place the atmospheric installations of Meireles, Valeska Soares, and Tunga, which together gave the most coherent image of a group of family resemblances. When I say "atmospheric," I am using the word literally. For both Meireles and Soares, smell is one of the ways in which their work occupies space. Meireles' Volatile, 1994, was certainly the clearest and most effective of the installations. Doffing shoes and socks, the viewer entered a darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 room, divided in half by a wall, whose floor was completely covered in a thick layer of squishy squish·y  
adj. squish·i·er, squish·i·est
1. Soft and wet; spongy.

2. Sloppily sentimental.

Adj. 1.
 talcum tal·cum
n.
See talc.



talcum

talc, talcum powder.
 powder. The feeling was something like sinking one's feet into a ground of fine, damp ash. The air was permeated with the smell of natural gas, or, rather, with the smell artificially added to the inherently odorless o·dor·less  
adj.
Having no odor.



odor·less·ly adv.

o
 gas so that deadly leaks can be detected. (Despite the knowledge that I wasn't really being poisoned, I had to suppress a desperate and involuntary urge to flee.) Around the corner of an interior wall stood a single candle, which would have been sufficient, in the actual presence of gas, to set the space aflame.

To be sure, there is something sentimental about Volatile - its willful immersion in an atmosphere of morbidity and mourning closed off from outside reference. But this sentimentality - a sense of indulgence sometimes bordering on the decadent - tinged not the worst but the best of the work in this group of shows, from Soares' rose-strewn installation in the window of the New Museum to Adriana Varejao's paintings with imagery taken from ex votos, at the Annina Nosei gallery. The pervasive sense of dreamy dissipation in these works was already present in Oiticica's installation, which invited the public to lounge in hammocks while viewing a slide show about cocaine to the sound of Jimi Hendrix. "Art from Brazil" may have been intended to give Brazilian art its place in the international circuit of contemporary art - to prove itself, in the words of Brazil's ambassador, "fully engaged in the debate over modernity - yearning to continually move forward and to interact in a dynamic way with other sources of creativity from around the world," but the most interesting art on hand seemed at odds with this description. Disclaiming what perhaps amounts to a nostalgia for a fading notion of the dynamic and efficient North, these works suggest, instead, a will to inertia. Having taken the utopian promise of international Constructivism at its word, artists like Oiticica and Clark pushed through to what Paulo Herkenhoff describes as a politicized rediscovery of the subjective and corporeal Possessing a physical nature; having an objective, tangible existence; being capable of perception by touch and sight.

Under Common Law, corporeal hereditaments are physical objects encompassed in land, including the land itself and any tangible object on it, that can be
 in their vestiary and environmental works. Are the younger artists embracing the esthetics esthetics: see aesthetics.  of Mallarme in opposition to the neo-Concretists' Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerke, reducing their "mythless rituals" (in Clark's words) to the most formal indicators of absence? Whatever the intent, here the subject has become a mere citation, the self an evocation - a whiff of fear or desire.

Barry Schwabsky is a writer who lives in Brooklyn. He contributes frequently to Artforum.
COPYRIGHT 1995 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Schwabsky, Barry
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jun 22, 1995
Words:1155
Previous Article:1995 Biennial: film and video. (Whitney Biennial of American Art)
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