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Feast for the eyes: the art of Rivane Neuenschwander.


I recall staying in a skyscraper with a small jungle on the roof and then traveling by taxi through a hailstorm See .NET My Services.  to attend the sumptuous opening of a vast biennial organized around the (to me) surprising idea of cannibalism cannibalism (kăn`ĭbəlĭzəm) [Span. caníbal, referring to the Carib], eating of human flesh by other humans. . This was my first visit to Brazil, and it was the bewildering be·wil·der  
tr.v. be·wil·dered, be·wil·der·ing, be·wil·ders
1. To confuse or befuddle, especially with numerous conflicting situations, objects, or statements. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2.
 context in which I encountered Belo Horizonte--based artist Rivane Neuenschwander's work-delicate and often ephemeral in nature, yet so precise that you always immediately recognize its unmistakable atmosphere, its distinct tone. Or should I say scent? Or flavor?

Eye, nose, mouth: Whether in large murals made by affixing pepper to adhesive tape (Attachment, 2000) or in paintings with luridly colored stripes made of substances like orange powder and Indian curry (Eatable Alphabet, 2001), Neuenschwander's "visual" art involves more senses than one. Olfactory olfactory /ol·fac·to·ry/ (ol-fak´ter-e) pertaining to the sense of smell.

ol·fac·to·ry
adj.
Of, relating to, or contributing to the sense of smell.
 qualities play a central role, and in a number of pieces the mouth is also put to work, physically and symbolically. In Carta Faminta (Starving Letters), 2000 the oral process of incorporating external material is part of the production: Neuenschwander made the series by releasing hungry snails onto rice paper. Eagerly devouring their environment, the snails drew curious maps--the images have a strong cartographic car·tog·ra·phy  
n.
The art or technique of making maps or charts.



[French cartographie : carte, map (from Old French, from Latin charta, carta, paper made from papyrus
 appearance--while escaping the territory. The mouth is also significant in Eatable Alphabet, a series of abstract paintings composed of horizontal stripes against the white ground of PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride.
PVC
 in full polyvinyl chloride

Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide.
 board. The piece's title makes the ancient analogy of reading and eating--the prophet Ezekiel eating his roll is just on e of many biblical examples-relevant to the understanding of the work. While the different stripes of "edible letters" are visually similar, only the varying colors indicate that different food powders have been used, and the paintings are ordered alphabetically: acafrao, black pepper black pepper
 or pepper

Perennial, woody climbing vine (Piper nigrum) of the family Piperaceae, native to India; also, the hotly pungent spice made from its berries.
, colorifico, dill, espinafre, feijao arabe, gergelim, hahnchen, Indian curry, Jamaican pepper, krautersalz, lorbeer, mustard, noz moscada, orange, pimenta chili, quatre epices, rote beete, semente de papoula, tomate, urucum, vinaigrette, wasabi, xique-xique, yellow corn flour, zattar. This work is certainly experienced with the eyes, but its true significance is graspable only if the absence of the experience of taste is taken into account.

Or can the eye also eat? In the context of Brazilian art Brazilian visual art began in the 18th century with painting with a strong European accent.

Only in the 19th century was an original Brazilian art style introduced by Belmiro de Almeida Jr.
, the idea of cannibalism isn't such a strange starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
 for issues of interpretation and the varying aesthetic experience--quite the contrary. "Only anthropophagy an·thro·poph·a·gus  
n. pl. an·thro·poph·a·gi
A person who eats human flesh; a cannibal.



[Latin anthr
 unites us. Socially. Economically. Philosophically," declared the poet Oswald de Andrade José Oswald de Andrade Souza (January 11, 1890–October 22, 1954) was a Brazilian poet and polemicist. He was born and spent most of his life in São Paulo.

Andrade was one of the founders of Brazilian modernism and a member of the Group of Five, along with Mário de
 in his Manifesto antropo [ago (1928), describing the evolution of modern Brazilian culture in terms of the cannibalistic can·ni·bal  
n.
1. A person who eats the flesh of other humans.

2. An animal that feeds on others of its own kind.



[From Spanish Caníbalis,
 devouring of other cultures. In the words of art The vocabulary or terminology of a particular art, science, or profession, particularly those expressions that are peculiar to it.

Though a society may share a common language, there are many specialized uses of words based on human activities.
 critic Guy Brett, "This was a figure for the process by which Brazil 'swallowed' various world cultures in order to create its own, not in a predatory fashion but in a spirit of anti-colonialist rebellion." Andrade's oral metaphor took such hold almost half a century later that artist Helio Oiticica would define the resistance of Brazilian culture to external influences-its ability to ingest in·gest  
tr.v. in·gest·ed, in·gest·ing, in·gests
1. To take into the body by the mouth for digestion or absorption. See Synonyms at eat.

2.
 other cultural information instead of succumbing to some international style--as a kind of "super-cannibalism." And Lygia Clark Lygia Clark (1920 – 1988) was a Brazilian artist best known for her painting and installation work. She was often associated with the Brazilian Constructivist movements of the mid-20th century and the Tropicalia movement.  considers the con cept overtly in works such as Cannibalismo (Cannibalism) and Baba antropofagica (Cannibalistic slobber slob·ber  
v. slob·bered, slob·ber·ing, slob·bers

v.intr.
1. To let saliva or liquid spill out from the mouth; drool.

2.
; both 1973). "I think I have even become a cannibal. I feel like eating everybody around me that I love," she once wrote about her projects. The driving force of cannibalistic desire in Clark's artistic practice and approach to the world becomes less an issue of cultural influence than one of psychic economy.

Without wanting to reduce Neuenschwander's art to her famous predecessors' productions or to the modernist discourse of antropofagia, one cannot help but note, given her snails and "edible" letters, the presence of this typically Brazilian theme in her work: forms "eating" each other, continually incorporating, digesting, or assimilating others. Her art is full of containers and vessels, bubbles and receptacles. In Continente/Andando em Circulos (Continent/Walking in circles), 2000, which comprises a number of aluminum basins filled with water and coconut soap, one container will sometimes hold another, smaller container floating like a strangely hollow island in the liquid. And in Pertence. Nao pertence. (Belong. Not belong.), 2001, photographs show one, two, or three beetles sitting partially inside one, two, or three soap bubbles--a game of containing or being contained that is played out in all possible combinations. Totally straightforward yet nonetheless mysterious is Mal-entendido (Misunderstanding), 2 000, a sculpture consisting of almost nothing more than an egg floating in a water glass, sticking up partly but also appearing underwater, seemingly much bigger thanks to the enlarging effect of the convex liquid container.

Time also eats. After all, Saturn (the Roman god of harvests, known as Kronos in Greece) devoured his own children. And if ingestion ingestion /in·ges·tion/ (-chun) the taking of food, drugs, etc., into the body by mouth.

in·ges·tion
n.
1. The act of taking food and drink into the body by the mouth.

2.
 is one recurring theme in Neuenschwander's work, the relentless passage of time is another--and a possible link between them is the notion of melancholia MELANCHOLIA, med. jur. A name given by the ancients to a species of partial intellectual mania, now more generally known by the name of monomania. (q.v.) It bore this name because it was supposed to be always attended by dejection of mind and gloomy ideas. Vide Mania., . In his 1917 essay "Mourning and Melancholia," Freud explains the melancholic mel·an·chol·ic
adj.
1. Affected with or being subject to melancholy.

2. Of or relating to melancholia.
 person's inability to get over loss as a cannibalistic" oral fixation. Instead of working through the traumatic loss in a productive way--as does the person who actively mourns--the melancholic internalizes the lost object, thus producing an aching inner spatiality of agonizing phantasms. On a symbolic plane, the melancholic "eats" the absent object instead of accepting the loss. This theory, eccentric as it may seem, has been extensively elaborated in psychoanalytic literature, from Karl Abraham's writings in the ,20s to Julia Kristeva's 1987 study Soleil Noir: Depression et melancolie. (A number of key essays on the topic were penned by French psych oanalyst Pierre Fedida, who counted Lygia Clark among his patients in the early '70s.)

Many of Neuenschwander's objects and installations display her intense interest in organic substances--dried flowers, desiccated des·ic·cate  
v. des·ic·cat·ed, des·ic·cat·ing, des·ic·cates

v.tr.
1. To dry out thoroughly.

2. To preserve (foods) by removing the moisture. See Synonyms at dry.

3.
 insects, fruit, soap, garlic, paprika paprika: see pepper. , and tomatoes. With a keen sense of nature's ephemerality, she has produced a large number of works that seem to capture materials, living or dead, right at the moment before they change state or disappear. But the ethereal and melancholic beauty of decay and decomposition is not the only attraction of time's relentless flow for Neuenschwander. She is just as interested in the repetitions of simple chronometers, such as rhythmically dripping water--which the artist has used both on a small scale (with water drops falling gently from a plastic cup) and large. In Chove Chuva (Rains the rain), 2002, the central piece in the artist's exhibition last year at the Museu de Arte da Pampulha in Belo Horizonte Belo Horizonte (bəl'rēzôN`tĭ) [Port.,=beautiful horizon], city (1996 pop. 2,091,770), capital of Minas Gerais state, E Brazil. , twenty-five aluminum buckets filled with water were suspended in air, each one with a hole in the bottom so water dripped into other buckets place d on the floor. Every four hours a museum employee would refill the artificial waterfall, using ladders that were also part of the display.

And then there are Neuenschwander's calendars based on expiration dates--the tiny printed numbers on a can or package that are meant solely to provide information about a product's limited life span but which speak inadvertently of our own predicament as well: finitude fin·i·tude  
n.
The quality or condition of being finite.

Noun 1. finitude - the quality of being finite
boundedness, finiteness
. For Deadline Calendar, 2002, Neuenschwander collected food items displaying "Best

Before" dates and placed these products (one for each day of the year) in each of twelve frames, one for each month. The strictly ordered multitude of lurid pieces of packaging thus represented a full year's cycle--every day a memento mori. An accompanying piece, Found Calendar, 2002, speaks just as explicitly about time's passage and its organization according to the cycles of sun and moon. The artist placed bits of paper from ads, tickets, and newspaper articles--each one bearing a number, from one to thirty-one-and placed them in order under glass. Thus, she constructed her own calendars for the very months during which the exhibitions took place. A third piece referencing the lunar cycle, Still-Life Calendar, 2002, is more oblique, consisting of a wall covered with thirty-one photographs of fruit. If not for the title, and perhaps the number of images, the viewer would hardly have guessed that these pictures--taken of street-market signs and partly covered with ground black pepper (a recurring ingredient in Neuenschwander's production)--would constitute some kind of calendar. Still, the bananas, apples, and other pieces of fruit depicted all possess a similar hue, thanks to Neuenschwander's thin film of spice, making them perhaps most arresting for their olfactory properties--a reversal of the senses that is a key characteristic of her art.

The mouth, as Hegel liked to point out, is the privileged connection between interior and exterior, between subjectivity and the world of objects--the site where nourishment enters the metabolic system, and thought, via language, becomesy perceivable by the senses. Of course, the medium for thought is the voice, which is characterized by a unique kind of self-effacement: Thoughts enter the world but often evaporate immediately with hardly a trace. In a series of miniatures titled "Involuntary Sculptures (speech acts)," 2001-2002, Neuenschwander considers places where speech is particularly present: the tables of restaurants and cafes. Napkins, toothpicks, straws, matches, and matchboxes are spontaneously formed into small sculptures that are, in effect, traces of conversation. "The communication and consumption occurring with the mouth during their creation is echoed and then transformed," writes Olukemi Ilesanmi, curator of Neuenschwander's recent exhibition at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. "The hand folds, cuts, tears, spikes in similar relation to the multitasking multitasking

Mode of computer operation in which the computer works on multiple tasks at the same time. A task is a computer program (or part of a program) that can be run as a separate entity.
 mouth that chews, articulates, spits, and hums." This series of miniatures-constructed out of the things you find on dinner tables-thus represents a catalogue of oral activities.

Catalogues, maps, alphabets, calendars: Neuenschwander utilizes not only the devices with which we measure time but also conventional tools that order the universe and so turn the chaos of things into a structured, even meaningful, web. While her series of snail-eaten sheets of rice paper composes an entire atlas of imaginary continents, a number of other works seem to allow nature itself to talk to us. In Word/World, 2001, a grainy grain·y  
adj. grain·i·er, grain·i·est
1. Made of or resembling grain; granular.

2. Resembling the grain of wood.

3. Having a granular appearance due to the clumping of particles in the emulsion.
 sixty-minute Super-8 film made in collaboration with fellow Brazilian Cao Guimaraes, ants carry tiny banners saying WORD and WORLD. The film's close-up views make the ants appear to be gigantic black-and-white monsters who deliver the message that the world can be read-that the structure of the world is linguistic. Similarly, in Love Lettering, 2002, a video Neuenschwander produced with her brother Sergio (who, as a neuroscientist and student of the cognitive biologist Francisco Varela, seems open to speculative renderings of natural processes), small goldfish swim back and forth in bright blue water, with little banners trailing behind them reading MY DEAR, MY LOVE, and KISSING-obviously fragments from a love letter. In the same vein, the large installation Palavras Cruzadas (Scrabble), 2000, consists of a labyrinth of cardboard boxes and hundreds of peeled, dehydrated de·hy·drate  
v. de·hy·drat·ed, de·hy·drat·ing, de·hy·drates

v.tr.
1. To remove water from; make anhydrous.

2. To preserve by removing water from (vegetables, for example).
 oranges. The large aromatic fruits are carved so that each one bears a letter. Again, the artist creates an "edible" alphabet, but this time one that you may touch and use: Audiences are invited to form words, to play Scrabble with the fruit--that is, to make sense out of nonsense.

To read is to eat, to eat is to read-such is the oral obsession of the hermeneutic her·me·neu·tic   also her·me·neu·ti·cal
adj.
Interpretive; explanatory.



[Greek herm
 tradition, from the founders of biblical exegesis exegesis

Scholarly interpretation of religious texts, using linguistic, historical, and other methods. In Judaism and Christianity, it has been used extensively in the study of the Bible. Textual criticism tries to establish the accuracy of biblical texts.
 all the way up to Hans-Georg Gadamer's Verschmelzung, his attempt to assimilate and digest the texts he reads. Digest everything. Engulf en·gulf  
tr.v. en·gulfed, en·gulf·ing, en·gulfs
To swallow up or overwhelm by or as if by overflowing and enclosing: The spring tide engulfed the beach houses.
 the text in its entirety, leave no details unread and external: If that's the imperative for art audiences, Neuenschwander's work may produce frustration and a sense of isolation. In life, seen within the prism of her art, the bubble of the self seems to remain no matter how much you want to assimilate the outside world. The metaphor applies to her black-and-white film Inventario das pequenas mortes (sopro) (Inventory of small deaths [blow]), 2000, another collaboration with Cao Guimaraes, which charts the life of a bubble blown by the wind across the Brazilian landscape. Palm trees and clouds shimmer, slightly distorted, through the transparent membrane. Things that are outside appear, for a moment, inside: The form is infinitely vulnerable ye t flexible and capable of reflecting the world in its entirety. Is this the melancholic predicament of the self-open to everything, yet forever alone?

Daniel Bimbaum, a contributing editor of Artforum, is director of the Stadelschule art academy in Frankfurt and heads the institution's Portikus gallery.
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Author:Birnbaum, Daniel
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:3BRAZ
Date:May 1, 2003
Words:2028
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