sábado, 24 de novembro de 2012

Man and his Sheep - Ana Maria Pacheco




Ana Maria Pacheco
Man and His Sheep, 1989
Sculpture, polychromed wood, Jura Marble base
200 x 450 x 400 cm | 6ft 7 x 14ft 9 x 13ft 1½ in
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery Collection

I took my own  photographs of this on a visit to Birmingham a few weeks ago. The video gives an
idea of the scale and the positioning of the sculpted figures, but flattens the features. The furtive faces carved from heavy wood are in a contrast to similar carved Baroque saintly figures found in Brazilian churches,  and this is the real expression of the purpose of the piece. The Gallery has some examples of the latter in a seperate room, but the scuptures are from Europe - mainly Austria and Germany.


 Man and his Sheep is a deliberate comment on the affect of the Ditadura (Brazilian Dictatorship of 1964 - 84) on culture, on censorship and of course on political leadership.  It also references a specific element of the course of the Military take over in 1964, which was a series of marches by Catholic Women against `Communism` (Marcha da Família com Deus pela Liberdade).  However it is important to note this is not a dualistic historical divide, and in some parts of Brazil members of the Catholic church were executed and tortured for opposing the regime and promoting `Liberation Theology` - which is about trying to alter economic inequality. Of course political oppositions do not always involve religion - but the following of a leader can be similar. In this case it is important to note the blood on the hands of the nearly naked man with his shepherds crook in front of the women.

In an oppressive regime rumour, gossip and spying on others is the tool of selecting victims for torture, and so retience becomes a necessity.






But public display of unity such as Brazil`s frequent religious processions or the long tradition of Carnival can be manipulated. In the traditional black covered costume of the old Portuguese widow`s garb, with an image of strong commitment to church and respectability, these figures betray their participation in covering up an invidious murderous reality, yet at the same time their furtive glances show the fear with which they take part and their suspicion of their neighbours.









 Portugal, Spain and Greece had similar regimes in the same era. So did South America, and the history of United States involvement in such dictatorships as a part of the Cold War is something which continues to maim relationships between the two Americas to this day. Ana Maria Pacheco left Brazil in 1973, as many young Brazilian artists did, and has lived and worked in Britain effectively in exile.



References of interest:

 

Whistler, Catherine. Opulence and Devotion: Brazilian Baroque Art. Oxford : Brasil Connects/Ashmolean Museum. 2001. (Exhibition Catalogue with essays and illustrations).

A biography of the current President of Brazil, who was arrested and tortured during the Ditadura for her political opposition to the loss of democracy


Torres, Mateus Gamba. Lutar para manter, lutar para romper:
mulheres e a ditadura militar brasileira 
Em Debat: Rev. Dig., ISSNe 1980-3532, Florianópolis, n. 4, p. 93-105, 2010. 
(Doutorando em História Social (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul-UFRGS) 
 http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/emdebate/article/view/21786

First exhibiton of Pacheco`s work in Brazil opens this month, November 2012










domingo, 11 de novembro de 2012

Cristhiano Aguiar - Granta List

Totally thrilled to be reminded as Granta publishes its list of 20 up and coming Brazilian Novelists that the first name on the list is Cristhiano Aguiar. I spent time with Cristhiano at UFPE in 2004, as
a fellow student on the Letras Course. He was widely seen as the best student, and came first in the class at the end of his undergraduate course. I once shared a bus journey with him through Recife to the University - the campus is on the Varzea, about an hour from Boa Viagem, as he hand wrote  4 very shaky pages of titles and reading `musts` about the Didatura for me, very knowledgeable and kind. Since then he has been publishing, and promoting literature and poetry events in Recife, editing the UFPE Crispim journal, and the same in Paraiba where his family, who are also academics have been based.  He had gone to California recently to do his PHD, but I see that much of his web presence - his long term blog Linguagem Guilhotina 
and other material has disappeared, as I expect his publicity will now be less personal !

Cristhiano  (on right) at Freeport – the Recife Literary festival.

There is a special event at the Brazil Institute, Kings College London to celebrate the Granta Publication 
Join Granta Best Young Brazilian Novelists Michel Laub and Tatiana Salem Levy, translator Stefan Tobler and Granta deputy editor Ellah Allfrey for readings and conversation about the next generation of Brazilian literature and its debut in the English-speaking world. 
Date: Monday 12 November
Time: 18:30
Location: The Pyramid Room, 4th Floor King's Building, Strand Campus, London WC2R 2LS
FREE to attend. Wine and nibbles.