Showing posts with label Sao Paulo Bienal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sao Paulo Bienal. Show all posts

Monday, October 4, 2010

OCTAVIO ZAYA: POLITICS AND 'THE POLITICAL': THE 29 SAO PAULO BIENAL


The 29 Sao Paulo Bienal curatorial team. From left to right: Fernando Alvim, Agnaldo Farias, Rina Carvajal, Chus Martínez, Yuko Hasegawa, Sarat Maharaj and Moacir dos Anjos.

Politics and "The Political" at the 29th São Paulo Biennial
Sep 25 – Dec 12, 2010
by Octavio Zaya

How do you follow, and what do you do after "The Void," the so-dubbed 28th edition of the São Paulo Biennial (2008)? Its Artistic Director, the internationally known and experienced curator Ivo Mesquita, left the huge second floor of the Oscar Niemeyer building entirely empty as a comment on the intricate bureaucratic politics of the event, and on biennials in general. His budget had been reduced as well, from the $12 million of the previous 27th Biennial to a mere $3.5 million, and he left a debt of some $2 million. He selected just over 40 artists to convey a radical curatorial statement, while trying to place the 28th Biennial "in living contact" with the art of the world.

In contrast, this year's 29th edition, said to be anchored by the notion that "it is impossible to separate art from politics," has benefited from major advantages: the commitment and resolve of the new president of the Foundation (elected last year), the well-respected consulting executive Heitor Martins, who presided over a spectacular turn in the finances of the SP Biennial; as well as a new Biennial Council, directly linked with the arts. On top of all that, this edition had at its disposal a very healthy and generous budget of $17.5 million and 159 artists to boot.

In July 2009, Moacir dos Anjos was appointed Chief Curator of the 29th edition of the SP Biennial. He served as Director of the Museum of Modern Art of Recife, Brazil, between 2001 and 2006; and as co-curator of the Brazil participation as guest country at ARCO'08 in Madrid. A specialist in Nelson Leirner, Cildo Meireles, and Rosângela Rennó, dos Anjos immediately revealed his intention of "reasserting the relevance of the São Paulo Biennial" after its rather serious institutional crisis, and of vindicating what he called the "experimentalism" of biennials as the fundamental principle of his platform. He conceived an ambitious project, inspired by the Brazilian poet Jorge de Lima's major work, Invenção de Orfeu (1952), from which dos Anjos took the title of the 29th edition: "Há sempre um copo de mar para um homem navegar" (There's always a cup of sea to sail in).

By mid-November 2009, at the same time that dos Anjos disclosed the composition of the international team of curators who were to assist him in developing his project, it was announced that he was about to share the directorship of the Biennial with Agnaldo Farias, better known for his involvement and work in the two worst biennials in the history of São Paulo, those directed by Nelson Aguilar (1996) and Alfons Hug (2002). When the Biennial opened to the public on September 25th, the Brazilian press covering the Biennial devoted its attention to Farias, often without mentioning dos Anjos, who had already disappeared from the public eye. Farias had become the de facto Chief Curator of the 29th edition of the Biennial.

What happened in between I cannot say. It will most likely remain a subject of speculation and dispute, among the secrets that always surround events of this kind. The story is very telling, however, not only about the dynamics that may have doomed this promising edition, but also the shortsightedness of those in a position to prevent it. For this Biennial not only has a spectacular team of curators—Rina Carvajal, Sarat Maharaj, Chus Martínez, Yuko Hasegawa, and Fernando Alvim (who nevertheless ended up fighting among themselves for lack of proper direction)—but it also has the support and enthusiasm of a whole art community, a public ready to turn the corner from oblivion and irrelevance, the means to get there, and a multitude of artists with impressive works to make it happen.

The result, instead, is boring, to say the least. Forget the utopian dimension that dos Anjos envisioned from the verses of Jorge de Lima, whose Invention of Orpheus sings of "the power to sail on, even without ships, / even without waves and sand". Forget experimentation and forget risk. But please don't get it wrong: when Rina Carvajal announced in November 2009 that the Biennial was going to take up the relations of art and politics, I'm sure she could not have foreseen the dispersal and misplacement of artists and their works—works that, in context, could have offered a compelling, even revisionary understanding of the complex ideas and influences that preceded what today passes as "political art." And I'm almost convinced that the contributions of Chus Martínez would have made clear the direction of those routes and openings that talented artists such as Jonathas de Andrade, Tobias Putrih, Mário Garcia Torres, Tamar Guimarães or Antonio Vega Macotela could only manage to insinuate, individually, in this general confusion.

In truth, there was enough to have "an extraordinary Biennial," as Carvajal had dreamed of, but not enough to make sense of it. A purpose, a direction, or a clear idea of how to relate artists, artworks, times, and places to one another was missing. And the 29th SP Biennial really has it all: from wonderful terreiros (meeting places) with a variety of functions to art-fair-style, monumentally ugly-tacky sculptures; from political manifestos to social documentaries; from opportunist trivialities to philosophical conundrums; from porno-misery to graffiti; from anthropological entertainment to psycho-poetry; from light shows to poetic pedagogy. It was all there together, leveled, as if in an art fair, without purpose and without sense; loosely framed, instead, between Flávio de Carvalho's revelation ("All of the ideas here exposed, all of the conclusions reached, are attempts to attain a supposed truth… an illusory phenomenon imperceptible to the naked eye") and Anri Sala's predicament via The Clash (Should I Stay or Should I Go?).

There are also "political scandals," some more entertaining than others. The one instigated by Roberto Jacoby's work, a sort of electoral office managed by an Argentine Brigade for Dilma Rousseff, the Workers' Party candidate to the Brazilian presidency, threatens to be milked until the end of the Biennial. According to the Biennial Foundation, a report by the Electoral Attorney General's office considered the work to be "an electoral offense," breaking the law that prohibits "the transmission of propaganda of any nature" in places run by public authorities. Agnaldo Farias declared to the press: "We can not contest the court ruling because we even run the risk of going to jail. If we had known in advance that the work dealt with Dilma, we would have warned the artist, because we'd have known there would be problems." Consequently, the work was covered from view, literally censored from the exhibition. As for the curator's claim not to have known the nature of the work: he could have seen it perfectly reproduced in his Biennial's catalogue and its website.

The apparent paradox that this situation has happened within the context of an exhibition that insists on the relations of art and politics attests to what Jacoby wanted to achieve in the first place: "forcing the art establishment to become involved in a discussion on the verifiable fact that, today, in a geopolitical space like Latin America, there is more experimentation, more creativity, and—ultimately—more hope in the realm of politics—from institutions to social movements—than in the contemporary art system."

Whatever you may think of the work, it seems beyond the pale when a curator decides to censor a work by protecting himself behind the alleged decision of a tribunal that expressed the possibility that Jacoby's work may be required to comply with an electoral law. The least that an artist could expect from a curator is the total and unequivocal defense of the art space as "territory of full liberty," as editor Marcos Augusto Gonçalves characterizes it. But instead of evaluating and answering for Jacoby's politically confrontational work with artistic and aesthetic criteria, Farias allows it to be judged by an electoral law to which he subscribes his authority and his exhibition, thus confusing politics and the political. That is, Farias's decision dangerously obliterates any distinction between what Jacoby is dealing with (politics) and that other meeting ground between politics and the police (the political), where rights and freedoms confront the established order of control.

In brief, under Farias's conservative and reactionary direction of the 29th edition of the SP Biennial, scattered and adrift, is a missed opportunity, lacking much sense or much guts. As if playing a game of daring to fall with a noose around his neck from a place high enough off the ground that the fall would hang him, Farias’s failure was already foretold. And so, the complexity and poetry that dos Anjos proposed became, simply put, a matter for the police to deal with. I’m almost sure that this is precisely what the three live vultures in Nuno Ramos’ gigantic and brutalist sculpture were anticipating.


Octavio Zaya is a curator and writer based in New York since 1978. Director of the journal Atlantica (CAAM, Canary Islands), Curator at Large of MUSAC (Leon, Spain), and co-Director of RADAR, MUSAC's journal. He was one of the curators of Documenta 11 (2002) under the Direction of Okwui Enwezor.

Text originally published in e-flux's art agenda.

Monday, September 27, 2010

WHAT WAS AN ELECTORAL CAMPAIGN DOING INSIDE THE SAO PAULO BIENAL? THE CENSORSHIP OF ROBERTO JACOBY AND THE BRIGADA INTERNACIONAL'S PARTICIPATION




work after censored


Brigada Internacional from Argentina participating in the Bienal supporting Dilma, the presidential candidate of the PT


censored video

visit http://brigadainternacionalargentina.blogspot.com/
visti the 29 Sao Paulo Bienal website


Sao Paulo is Burning: The Spectre of Politics at the Biennal

"The 29th Sao Paulo Biennial is anchored in the idea that it is impossible to separate art and politics." In view of the events of the past 48 hours, there are serious reasons to doubt the honesty of this statement.

The work that is shaping up to become the most interesting at the Sao Paulo Biennial has not been made by any artist, but by the institution itself, when it issued the order to cover some imposing panels with plain paper, to prevent visitors from seeing two large photographs: the friendly, attractive face of Dilma Rousseff opposite the sour expression of José Serra, her Social Democratic rival in Brazil’s presidential elections.

The Argentinean artist Roberto Jacoby’s work for the biennial consisted of socialising his space and allowing it to be managed by the Argentinean Brigade for Dilma, which openly proceeded to spread propaganda in favour of the Workers’ Party (PT) candidate as Lula’s successor, choosing to be part of an exceptional historic moment of unity, solidarity, redistribution and democracy that is opening up in Latin America.

According to the – not very convincing – justification that has been issued by the Sao Paulo Biennial Foundation, a report by the Electoral Attorney General’s office has decreed that the work qualifies as an “electoral offense” in that breaks the law that prohibits the “transmission of propaganda of any nature” in spaces that are run by public authorities. However, the Biennial itself had contacted the legal authorities in the first place to report the work that they had invited.

In a statement to the press, one of the curators of the Biennial, Agnaldo Farias, declared that “we can not contest the court ruling, because we even run the risk of going to jail. If we had known in advance that the work dealt with Dilma, we would have warned the artist, because we’d have known there would be problems.” The curators’ arguments that they had been “taken unawares” by the evolution of the work does not stand up to scrutiny, given that the censured photograph is included in the Biennial’s catalogue and web site.

The only possible response to this cowardly statement is a question: what does an established art curator think he is asking for when he invokes the word “politics”? Aside from this specific case, it is not unusual to see curatorial projects that use the link between “art and politics” to exhibit documentary cemeteries or portraits of faraway strange or poor people. Jacoby’s political artwork at this Biennial effectively opposes the disempowerment of political art that is currently exercised in the institutional mainstream.

So what happens when an artist is serious about the need to turn an artistic space into a public space, in order to generate political confrontation – rather than false consensus – in real time, and in the very belly of the art system? El alma nunca piensa sin imagen / The soul never thinks without images – which is the title of the work – does not just consist of electoral propaganda in favour of Dilma: the section of the exhibition allocated to Jacoby was also transformed into a machine for producing antagonism between different opinions, taking sides and forcing the art establishment to become involved in a discussion on the verifiable fact that, today, in a geopolitical space like Latin America, there is more experimentation, more creativity and – ultimately – more hope in the realm of politics – from institutions to social movements – than in the contemporary art system.

Jacoby is participating in the Biennial on two counts, given that he is also part of the collective of artists, sociologists and militants from several Argentinean cities who produced the historic exhibition Tucumán Arde (Tucumán is Burning) in 1968, a project that is mistakenly documented on the Biennial web site – and this is a serious and telling symptom – as a work by the Grupo de Arte de Vanguardia of the city of Rosario. Tucumán Arde was closed down at the labour union headquarters in Buenos Aires, due to pressure from the army during the dictatorship of General Onganía: its provocation consisted in overflowing the art system in order to embrace the social protest against the existing system. The other way round, El alma nunca piensa sin imagen seems to have been censured for having brought into the centre of the art system an activity in favour of a non-artistic process that takes place in the political institution. The Argentinean Brigade for Dilma exhibits it as something much more real – in that it is more imperfect and ultimately complex – than the immaculate halo that usually surrounds the word “politics” in curatorial texts.

Buenos Aires / Sao Paulo, September 23rd , 2010

To publicly support this declaration, email:

elalmanuncapiensasinimagen@gmail.com

Please support, distribute, and publish in your blogs.

Members of the Argentinean Brigade for Dilma:

Adriana Minoliti, Alejandro Ros, Ana Longoni, Alina Perkins, Cecilia Sainz, Cecilia Szalkowicz, Daniel Joglar, Fernanda Laguna, Francisco Garamona, Florencia Hipolitti, Paula Bugni, Hernán Paganini, Javier Barilaro, José Fernández Vega, Julia Ramírez, Kiwi Sainz, Laura Escobar, Lidia Aufgang, Lucas Rubinich, Mariano Andrade, Mariela Scafati, Mariela Bond, María Granillo, Nacho Marciano, Roberto Jacoby, Santiago Villanueva, Syd Krochmalny, Tomás Espina, Víctor Florido, Victoria Colmegna.

Supporting this declaration (updated: 25/9/2010)

Marcelo Expósito (Barcelona/Buenos Aires), Gachi Hasper (Buenos Aires), Diana Aisenberg (Buenos Aires), Cecilia Sainz (Buenos Aires), Federico Geller (Buenos Aires), Helena Chávez (México), Fernanda Nogueira (Sao Paulo), Miguel López (Lima), Francisco Reyes Palma (México), Marina de Caro (Buenos Aires), Octaviano Moniz Barreto (Bahia), Damián Ríos, Inés Patricio (Rio de Janeiro), Hugo Salas, Guadalupe Maradei (Buenos Aires), Federico Brollo (Buenos Aires), Hugo Vidal (Buenos Aires), Leo Ramos (Resistencia), Ramiro Larraín (Buenos Aires), Inés Martino (Rosario), Compartiendo Capital (Rosario), David Gutiérrez Castañeda (México/Bogotá), Hernán Rodolfo Ulm (Argentina), Beba Eguía (Buenos Aires), Ricardo Piglia (Buenos Aires), Mariana Serbent (Mendoza), Laura García Hernàndez, Magdalena Jitrik (Buenos Aires), José Curia, Leandro Katz (Buenos Aires), Adrián Pérez (Buenos Aires), Eduardo Grüner (Buenos Aires), Carolina Senmartín (Còrdoba), Mariana Botey (México), Carlos Aranda (México), Daniel Duchowney (Argentina), Aldo Ambrozio (Brasil), Carlos Banzi (Argentina), José Luis Meirás (Buenos Aires), Gabriela Nouzeilles (Princeton), Lía Colombino (Asunción), Museo del Barro (Asunción), Taller Crìtica (Asunción), Fernando Davis (Buenos Aires), William López (Bogotá), José Ignacio Otero (Buenos Aires), Leonardo Retamoso Palma (Santa María), Emilio Tarazona (Lima), Ricardo Resende (Sao Paulo), María Cristina Pérez (Rosario), Gustavo López (Bahía Blanca), Marcelo Diaz (Argentina), José Luis Tuñón (Comodoro Rivadavia), Carlos Dias (Brasil), Claudia del Río (Argentina), Juan Manuel Burgos (Còrdoba), Marcos Ferreira de Paula (Sao Paulo), Amalia Gieschen (Argentina), Suely Rolnik (Sao Paulo), Cristina Ribas (Rio de Janeiro), André Mesquita (Sao Paulo).

*****

Roberto Jacoby's Proposal for the Bienal (in spanish and portuguese):
Proyecto General
Oficina de campaña en apoyo de Dilma Rousseff

Instalación de una oficina de campaña en favor de Dilma Rousseff en la Bienal de Sao Paulo, por las elecciones presidenciales de Brasil el 3 de octubre de 2010.

Todo el espacio (unos 130 metros cuadrados) estará cubierto con afiches de la campaña del PT, banderas, carteles, volantes, camisetas, pins y pasacalles.

Habrá un escenario con micrófono y parlantes, donde se harán conferencias, palestras y el público de la Bienal podrá hablar libremente.

Se proyectará un video de Spots de opiniones a favor de la candidatura de Dilma Rousseff.

Se instalarán computadoras con wifi, impresoras, mesas de serigrafía, máquinas para fabricar pins, se producirán afiches, volantes, camisetas, jingles, y se registrará las opinones del público en diversos formatos. El público también podrá escribir cartas con sus opiniones y pegarlas en las paredes.

La Brigada Internacional Argentina de apoyo a Dilma viajará a Brasil y realizará talleres, paneles y actividades diversas durante el 20 y el 26 de Septiembre.

Se invita a artistas, intelectuales y activistas para el desarrollo de estas actividades hasta el 12 de Diciembre.

*****

Descripçao:

22 artistas e intelectuais argentinos viajam a SP para participar do projeto. Elles sempre usaram as camisetas da Brigada.

• Instalamos nos nossos 200 metros quadrados uma “unidade básica” do Partido dos Trabalhadores, de Lula para fazer campanha a favor de sua candidata Dilma Rousseff. Esta eleição é absolutamente decisiva para nossas vidas: se o Brasil cai nas mãos da direita ou seja Serra, tchau América Latina, tchau Argentina. O futuro ficará para mais adiante. Para isso esperamos contar com o apoio do PT y de activistas sociales y culturales.

No espaço haverá:
o Uma gigantografia cuja imagem adjunto no iste email.
o Um cenário (também uma caixa para guardar nossas coisas)
o Um microfone
o Duas caixas de som
o Duas luzes par 1000
o Luz ambiente com um dimmer
o Paredes com cartazes, reproduzindo uma unidade básica
o Faixas, etc.
o Mesas de trabalho, serigrafia, etc.
o Laptops com acesso à Internet
o 1 ou 2 impressoras.
o Scanner
o Um liquidificador e frutas
o E coisas necessárias que forem surgindo
• O que nós faríamos seriam oficinas, conversas, conferências, danças, técnicas gráficas, etc., relacionados com Dilma e as eleições.
• Dirigimo-nos sobretudo às pessoas jovens, estudantes e universitários que gostariam de fazer parte da campanha, mas que não estão no PT e não sabem o que e nem como fazêlo.
• Convidaremos a pessoas interessadas e aos assistentes da bienal para que se integrem a fazer as coisas, participar das palestras, ouvir as rádios, etc.
• Por exemplo: oficina de jingles ou ritmos, cartazes, broches, panfletos, fanzines, teatro de fantoches, etc.
• Tudo será feito na hora e distribuído no momento.
• Teremos um blog onde subiremos no momento as produções para que em qualquer parte do Brasil qualquer pessoa possa fazê-los. Criaremos uma red através de Factbook e Twitter.
• As atividades estarão programadas por faixa de horários para que não se sobreponham, evitando que se perturbem: por exemplo, que um orador esteja falando e que se esteja batucando ao mesmo tempo.
• Como apoio à campanha desde Argentina, faremos uma série de clips de celebridades argentinas conhecidas entre todos nós ou que sejam fáceis de contatar. Os clips se filmarão com celulares, i-pods ou blackberrys e se subirão ao blog. Também estarão num monitor na sala.
• Tudo mais

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

29 SAO PAULO BIENAL. ARTIST LIST.

“Há sempre um copo de mar para um homem navegar”
“There is always a cup of sea to sail in”

Curadores-chefe / Chief curators: Moacir dos Anjos, Agnaldo Farias
Curadores convidados / Invited curators: Chus Martinez, Fernando Alvim, Rina Carvajal, Sarat Maharaj, Yuko Hasegawa

Opening: September 21, 2010

1. Adrian Piper / EUA / Germany / 1948
2. Aernout Mik / Netherlands / Netherlands / 1962
3. Ai Weiwei / China / China / 1957
4. Albano Afonso / Brasil / Brasil / 1964
5. Alberto Greco / Argentina / 1931 - 1965
6. Alessandra Sanguinetti / EUA / EUA / 1968
7. Alfredo Jaar / Chile / USA / 1956
8. Alice Miceli / Brasil / Brasil / 1980
9. Allan Sekula / USA / USA / 1951
10. Allora & Calzadilla – Allora / USA / Puerto Rico / 1974 and Calzadilla / Cuba / Puerto Rico / 1971
11. Amar Kanwar / India / India / 1964
12. Amélia Toledo / Brasil / Brasil / 1926
13. Ana Gallardo / Argentina / Argentina / 1958
14. Andrea Büttner / Germany / Germany / 1972
15. Andrea Geyer / Germany / Germany and USA / 1971
16. Andrew Esiebo / Nigeria / Nigeria / 1978
17. Anna Maria Maiolino / Italy / Brasil / 1942
18. Anri Sala / Albania / Germany / 1974
19. Antonieta Sosa / USA / Venezuela / 1940
20. Antonio Dias / Brasil / Brasil / 1944
21. Antonio Manuel / Portugal / Brasil / 1947
22. Apichatpong Weerasethakul / Thailand / Thailand / 1970
23. Archigram Group / England / 1960s
24. Artur Barrio / Portugal / Brasil / 1946
25. Artur Zmijewski / Poland / Poland / 1966
26. Bofa da Cara - Pere Ortín / Spain / 1968 and Nástio Mosquito / Angola / 1981
27. CADA - Colectivo Acciones de Arte / Chile / 1979
28. Carlos Bunga / Portugal / Spain / 1976
29. Carlos Garaicoa / Cuba / Cuba
30. Carlos Teixeira / Brasil / Brasil / 1966
31. Carlos Vergara / Brasil / Brasil / 1941
32. Carlos Zilio / Brasil / Brasil / 1944
33. Chantal Akerman / Belgium / France / 1950
34. Cildo Meireles / Brasil / Brasil / 1948
35. Cinthia Marcelle / Brasil / Brasil / 1974
36. Claudia Joskowicz / Bolivia / USA
37. Claudio Perna / Venezuela / 1938-1997
38. Daniel Senise / Brasil / Brasil / 1955
39. David Claerbout / Belgium / Belgium / 1969
40. David Cury / Brasil / Brasil
41. David Goldblatt / South Africa / South Africa / 1930
42. David Lamelas / Argentina / Argentina and USA / 1946
43. David Maljkovic / Croatia / Croatia / 1973
44. Deimantas Narkevicius / Lithuania / 1964
45. Dora Garcia / Spain / Belgium / 1965
46. Douglas Gordon / Scotland / Germany, Scotland and USA / 1966
47. Eduardo Coimbra / Brasil / Brasil / 1955
48. Eduardo Navarro / Argentina / Argentina /1979
49. Efrain Almeida / Brasil / Brasil / 1964
50. Emily Jacir / Palestine / USA and Palestine / 1970
51. Enrique Jezik / Argentina / Mexico / 1961
52. Ernesto Neto / Brasil / Brasil / 1964
53. Fernando Lindote / Brasil / Brasil / 1960
54. Filipa César / Portugal / Germany / 1975
55. Fiona Tan / Indonesia / Netherlands / 1966
56. Flávio de Carvalho / Brasil / 1899 - 1973
57. Francis Alÿs / Belgium / Mexico / 1959
58. Gabriel Acevedo / Peru / Germany /1976
59. Gil Vicente / Brasil / Brasil / 1958
60. Graziela Kunsch / Brasil / Brasil /1979
61. Gustav Metzger / Germany / England / 1926
62. Guy de Cointet / France / 1934 – 1983
63. Guy Veloso / Brasil / Brasil / 1969
64. Harun Farocki / Germany / Germany / 1944
65. Hélio Oiticica / Brasil / 1937 - 1980
66. Henrique Oliveira / Brasil / Brasil / 1973
67. Ilya Kabakov / Russia / Russia / 1933
68. Isa Genzken / Germany / Germany / 1948
69. Jacobo Borges / Venezuela / Venezuela and USA / 1931
70. James Coleman / Ireland / Ireland / 1941
71. Jeremy Deller / England / England / 1966
72. Jimmie Durham / USA / Italy / 1940
73. Joachim Koester / Denmark / USA / 1962
74. Jonas Mekas / Lithuania / Lithuania / 1922
75. Jonathas de Andrade / Brasil / Brasil
76. José Antonio Vega Macotela / Mexico / Mexico / 1980
77. José Leonilson / Brasil / 1957 - 1993
78. José Spaniol / Brasil / Brasil / 1960
79. Joseph Kosuth / USA / USA / 1945
80. Juliana Stein / Brasil / Brasil
81. Julie Ault and Martin Beck / USA and Austria / USA / 1957 and 1963
82. Karina Skvirsky Aguilera / USA / USA / 1967
83. Kboco e Roberto Loeb / Brasil / Brasil / 1978 and 1941
84. Kendell Geers / South Africa / Belgium / 1968
85. Kiluanji Kia Henda / Angola / Angola / 1979
86. Kutlug Ataman / Turkey / England / 1961
87. Livio Tragtenberg / Brasil / Brasil
88. Luiz Zerbini / Brasil / Brasil / 1959
89. Lygia Pape / Brasil / Brasil / 1927 - 2004
90. Manfred Pernice / Germany / Germany / 1963
91. Manon de Boer / India / Belgium and Netherlands / 1966
92. Marcelo Silveira / Brasil / Brasil / 1962
93. Marcius Galan / EUA / Brasil / 1972
94. Maria Thereza Alves / Brasil / Germany / 1961
95. Marilá Dardot and Fábio Morais / Brasil / Brasil / 1973 and 1975
96. Mário Garcia Torres / Mexico / Mexico / 1975
97. Marlene Dumas / South Africa / Netherlands / 1953
98. Marta Minujin / Argentina / Argentina / 1943
99. Mateo López / Colombia / Colombia / 1978
100. Matheus Rocha Pitta / Brasil / Brasil / 1980
101. Miguel Angel Rojas / Colombia / Colombia / 1946
102. Miguel Rio Branco / Spain / Brasil / 1946
103. Milton Machado / Brasil / Brasil / 1947
104. Mira Schendel / Switzerland / 1919 -1988
105. Moshekwa Langa / South Africa / Netherlands / 1975
106. Nan Goldin / USA / USA and France / 1953
107. Nelson Leirner / Brasil / Brasil / 1932
108. NS Harsha / India / India / 1969
109. Nuno Ramos / Brasil / Brasil / 1960
110. Oscar Bony / Argentina / 1941-2002
111. Oswaldo Goeldi / Brasil / 1895 –1961
112. Otobong Nkanga / Nigeria / France and Belgium / 1974
113. Otolith Group / England / England / 2000
114. Palle Nielsen / Denmark / Denmark / 1942
115. Paulo Bruscky / Brasil / Brasil / 1949
116. Pedro Barateiro / Portugal / Portugal / 1979
117. Pedro Costa / Portugal / Portugal / 1959
118. Pixação SP / Brasil / Brasil
119. Qiu Anxiong China / China / 1972
120. Raqs Media Colective / India / India / 1992
121. Rex Time / Brasil / Brasil / 1966
122. Roberto Jacoby / Argentina / Argentina / 1944
123. Rochele Costi / Brasil / Brasil / 1961
124. Rodrigo Andrade / Brasil / Brasil / 1962
125. Ronald Duarte / Brasil / Brasil / 1963
126. Rosangela Rennó / Brasil / Brasil / 1962
127. Runa Islam / Bangladesh / England /1970
128. Sandra Gamarra / Peru / Spain / 1972
129. Sara Ramo / Spain / Brasil / 1975
130. Simon Fujiwara / England / Germany / 1982
131. Sophie Ristelhueber / France / France / 1949
132. Steve McQueen / England / England and Netherlands / 1969
133. Sue Tompkins / England / Scotland / 1971
134. Superstudio / Italy / 1966
135. Susan Philipsz / Scotland / Germany / 1965
136. Tacita Dean / England / Germany / 1965
137. Tamar Guimarães / Brasil / Denmark
138. Tatiana Blass / Brasil / Brasil / 1979
139. Tatiana Trouvé / Italy / France / 1968
140. Tobias Putrih / Slovenia / USA / 1972
141. UNStudio / Netherlands / 1998
142. Wendelien van Oldenborgh / Netherlands / Netherlands / 1962
143. Wilfredo Prieto / Cuba / Spain / 1978
144. Yael Bartana / Israel / Israel and Netherlands / 1970
145. Yoel Vazquez / Cuba / Germany / 1973
146. Yonamine Miguel / Angola / Portugal / 1975
147. Yto Barrada / France / Morroco / 1971
148. Zanele Muholi / South Africa / South Africa / 1972

29th Bienal de São Paulo

The 29th Bienal de São Paulo is anchored on the notion that it is impossible to separate art from politics. Such impossibility is expressed in the fact that art, through ways of its own, is capable of blocking the sensorial coordinates through which we understand and inhabit the world by bringing into it themes and attitudes that did not previously fit in, thus making it different and wider.

The choice of this organizing principle for the 29th Bienal de São Paulo curatorial project rests on two major reasons. Firstly, because we live in a world of diverse conflicts, where sociability paradigms are being constantly challenged and on which art stands as a privileged means of understanding and, at the same time, reinventing reality. Secondly, the movement towards bringing art and politics closer together has been so intense in the past two decades that again emphasis should be placed on the uniqueness of the former over the latter, as they are very often confounded to the point of indistinctness.

In this sense, the title chosen for the 29th Bienal de São Paulo “There is always a cup of sea to sail in” - a quote borrowed from the Brazilian poet Jorge de Lima’s major work Invenção de Orfeu (1952) – singularly epitomizes what the forthcoming Bienal de São Paulo edition seeks to achieve: to assert that the utopian dimension of art is contained within itself, not without it or beyond it. It is in the “cup of sea” – or in this near infinite where artists insist on producing their works in – that in fact lies the power to move forward, despite everything else. As Jorge de Lima’s poem goes “the power to sail on even without ships / even without waves and sand.”

As a space where this commitment resonates in many different ways, the 29th Bienal exhibition will put visitors in touch with ways of thinking and inhabiting the world that go beyond the consensus building that organizes it and make it a small place to live, where not everything or everyone fits in. The 29th Bienal will bring visitors in touch with the politics of art.

Therefore, it is the 29th Bienal de São Paulo’s intention to be at once a celebration of art making and an assertion of its responsibility before life; a moment of disconcerting the senses while generating knowledge that is nowhere else. For this reason, it intends to instill its audience with the sensitive experience that emerges from the mesh of displayed works and their ability to critically reflect the world in which they are inscribed. In short, to provide examples of how art weaves a politics that is deeply entrenched into it.

Curatorial Team

The 29th Bienal de São Paulo is curated by Moacir dos Anjos and Agnaldo Farias and by a team of guest curators from various backgrounds who contribute their experience to the curatorial project, so that its reach and density are on par with the international vocation of the Bienal de São Paulo at its very inception. And they are: Fernando Alvim (Angola), Rina Carvajal (Venezuela / USA), Yuko Hasegawa (Japan), Sarat Maharaj (South Africa / UK), and Chus Martinez (Spain).

The Exhibit within Place and Time

The 29th Bienal de São Paulo exhibition will display works of art by approximately 145 artists from all over the world. The so-called national representations - a typical trait of the Bienal de São Paulo until recently - have been abolished as they no longer convey the complex network of migrations and cultural flows that characterize modern life. However, it is important for the 29th Bienal de São Paulo to emphasize the place and time in which it is organized: from Brazil and from a time of rapid geopolitical reorganization of the world.

Bienal Extended

The curatorial project described herein does not exhaust itself merely in the presentation of an articulated set of works of art, even though they are clearly its core and purpose. Nor does it limit itself to the dates when the exhibition will take place. The 29th Bienal de São Paulo will be extended into different parts, starting now, through its educational program, discursive activities, art residencies, and its website. It proposes to be a multi-faceted project where art is a means to get to know and change the world in a unique manner.

29ª Bienal de São Paulo artists

General Information

September 20th and 21st
Press preview

September 22nd, 23rd and 24th
Private previews

September 25th
10AM : Official Opening of the 29th São Paulo Biennial

December 12th
Closing of the 29th São Paulo Biennial

Opening hours
Mon-Wed: 9 AM to 7 PM.
Thu & Fri: 9 AM to 10 PM.
Sat & Sun: 9 AM to 7 PM.

http://www.fbsp.org.br/29_bienal-en.html