Jared Domicio: Centro Cultural Sao Paulo.Centro Cultural Sao Paulo is the municipal cultural center of Brazil's (and Latin America's) richest city, a metropolis whose budget is the third largest in the country after those of the federal government and the state of Sao Paulo. In contrast to the sparkling Pinacoteca do Estado de Sao Paulo, the state's well-kept art museum, however, the CCSP CCSP - Carbon Cycle Science Plan CCSP - Castlecops Security Professionals (forum) CCSP - Center for Communications and Signal Processing (New Jersey Institute of Technology) CCSP - Centrale Chrétienne des Services Publics (French, Belgium) CCSP - Certified Chiropractic Sports Physician CCSP - Certified Chiropractic Sports Practitioner CCSP - Certified Commercial Network Service Provider (Microsoft) CCSP - China Camp State Park is by no means an expression of Paulistano wealth. On the contrary, it enjoys very limited resources for its exhibitions. Its building is also far from efficient and seems like yet another example of those ambitiously commissioned government structures--spectacular, poorly designed, and haphazardly finished--typical of the Latin American megalopolis megalopolis (mĕgəlŏp`lĭs) [Gr.,=great city], a group of densely populated metropolitan areas that combine to form an urban complex. It was first used in its modern sense by Jean Gottman (1957) to describe the huge urban area along the eastern seaboard of the United States from Boston to Washington, D.C.. Yet, overcoming its exigencies through seriousness and shrewd curating, the CCSP has since 1990 been organizing a series of yearly projects with emerging artists that has launched many of the most notable new Brazilian names. These "simultaneous one-person exhibitions" are always accompanied by simple, straightforward brochures, featuring tiny illustrations (at least they're in color) and texts written by likewise emerging critics. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The specific contextual contradictions of the CCSP's exhibition program are particularly relevant to one of its recent shows, that of Jared Domicio. Domicio lives and works in Fortaleza Fortaleza (f rtəlĕ`zə), city (1996 pop. 1,967,365), capital of Ceará state, NE Brazil, a port on the Atlantic Ocean. The city, which is bisected by the Paejú River, is often called Ceará by foreigners., Ceara, in the poor northeastern part of Brazil. Very few contemporary artists from this region have gained international or even domestic recognition; one thinks only of Antonio Dias, from Joao Pessoa; Tunga Tunga /Tun·ga/ (tun´gah) a genus of fleas, including T. pe´netrans, the chigoe (q.v.)., from Palmares; and Leonilson, also from Fortaleza. All three moved very early on to Rio de Janeiro or Sao Paulo, the country's main cultural capitals, in order to pursue their work. Marepe, living in a small town in Bahia, remains a notable exception. Domicio's exhibition didn't address the geopolitics geopolitics, method of political analysis, popular in Central Europe during the first half of the 20th cent., that emphasized the role played by geography in international relations. Geopolitical theorists stress that natural political boundaries and access to important waterways are vital to a nation's survival. of the Brazilian art world directly but somehow seemed to tap into them. Selected for what is perhaps the country's most prestigious venue for young artists, Domicio strolled the streets of the big city in search of nothing but small stones that for some reason attracted his attention. With a handful of these, the artist produced his In calco, 2004. Within the space that the CCSP is able to offer, Domicio's gesture was a small one and could almost have passed unnoticed: The artist propped up the white partition walls with a few unremarkable stones collected outdoors. (The work's title is an untranslatable pun with the Portuguese word for "propped" rendered as a fake Latin expression.) The effect was of one of the type that is almost too subtle, but once perceived takes on a surprising and powerful dimension: The slightly propped walls have cracked, making evident their precarious construction, their poorly finished joints and edges. This slight unbalancing and fracturing of the temporary exhibition architecture in turn echoed the same features found in the supposedly more solid and permanent one that encloses it. Domicio's installation faces the CCSP's large atrium space, filled with mezzanines and crisscrossing ramps cast in stained concrete, which, despite their grandiloquence, seem strangely to compound our loss of equipoise here. Furthermore, the CCSP building is positioned on a slope that joins two roads; perhaps Domicio's stones, temporarily propping up its inner walls, succeeded in lending, after all, a final and well-balanced equilibrium to the great city's cultural center. |
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