Ernesto Neto: Galerie Max Hetzler.Right before his exhibition at Max Hetzler, the Brazilian sculptor Ernesto Neto was suddenly inspired to add two photographs to his three floor sculptures. He took the film with him to Berlin, reworked its motifs on a computer there, and sent the collages thus created to a local firm that produced Cibachrome prints for him. The result is a kaleidoscopic close-up of gray and ocher ocher (ō`kər), mixture of varying proportions of iron oxide and clay, used as a pigment. It occurs naturally as yellow ocher (yellow or yellow-brown in color), the iron oxide being limonite, or as red ocher, the iron oxide being hematite. patterned paving blocks in Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r whose individual, hand-hewn stones seem to move in waves. The titles that Neto chose for these impressions of the Brazilian city are as elusive as they are precise: The information of the skin moves through cells communication, 2004, and They say it happens through the proteins dance, 2004. In neither case does Neto comment on the urban topography; rather, his focus is on the interplay of the cityscape (company) CityScape - A re-seller of Internet connections to the PIPEX backbone.E-Mail: <sales@cityscape.co.uk>. Address: CityScape Internet Services, 59 Wycliffe Rd., Cambridge, CB1 3JE, England. Telephone: +44 (1223) 566 950. and the experience of the observer. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Indeed, the observer's active participation is at the center of all Neto's work. Art theorist Dirk Ufermann has spoken of "experience sculptures," putting Neto in the tradition of Brazilian artists like Helio Oiticica and Lygia Clark. Nevertheless Neto is far removed from the "anthropophagy an·thro·poph·a·gus n. pl. an·thro·poph·a·gi A person who eats human flesh; a cannibal. [Latin anthr " of earlier generations, or the ritual celebration of a concrete physical exchange between artwork and public. Even when his sculptures are conceived for use, his works live above all in the tension between their spatial presence and the detailed texture of their surfaces. In his outsize out·size n. 1. An unusual size, especially a very large size. 2. A garment of unusual size. adj. also out·sized Unusually large, weighty, or extensive. installations of Lycra, tulle Tulle (t l, Fr. tül), town (1990 pop. 18,685), capital of Corrèze dept., S central France. Firearms and other goods are made there. Tulle was built around a 7th-century monastery. , and polymer hosiery containing heaps of spices, only their intoxicating in·tox·i·cate v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates v.tr. 1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol. 2. scents turn these minimalistic objects into a labyrinth for the senses. For a sculpture that he installed in Hetzler's annex, housed in a railway arch, Neto used Lycra in combination with turmeric turmeric: see ginger. turmeric Perennial herbaceous plant (Curcuma longa; family Zingiberaceae), native to southern India and Indonesia. Its tuberous rhizomes have been used from antiquity as a condiment, as a textile dye, and medically as an , ginger, cumin, and cloves. But while in earlier works the spices were visually offset by the white, gauzelike fabric, here they remain hidden under a carpet-like sculpture, their fragrance emanating through small fissures--an olfactory accompaniment, a suggestion of foreignness in the art context. In his works for the main gallery, Neto's attention turned to the fantastic landscape that arises from the fabric's various shades: A web of changing pink and peach colors spreads across the entire room, rising in many places to about shoulder height, the abstract geography recalling a coral reef. The gallery characterizes the setting as "island-animal-mountain-scenery," and it is exactly this manifold quality that magically attracts the observer and forces him to his knees as he reaches out to feel the seductively soft material. Here the parallels to digitally altered photography become apparent: In both modes of Neto's installations, it is the surface of an everyday hewn from urban praxis that activates the observer in motion. The playful depiction of the concrete, photographed street confronts a utopian, alternative cityscape. This also fits with the collective character of his sculptures' production: The closely meshed assemblages of fabric were made under Neto's supervision by the craftswomen of the Coopa-Roca (Cooperativa de Trabalho Artesanal e de Costura da Rosinha) in a favela favela In Brazil, a slum or shantytown. A favela comes into being when squatters occupy vacant land at the edge of a city and construct shanties of salvaged or stolen materials. near Rio. In this sense one can understand his works as a field for social action--certainly as a symbol for "communication," as one of his two photographs announces in its very title. --Harald Fricke Translated from German by Sara Ogger. |
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thĭ zhənĕē`r
l, Fr. tül)
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