Sem Fronteiras/Without Borders
Transcription
Sem Fronteiras/Without Borders
SEM FRONTEIRAS/ WITHOUT BORDERS An exhibition presenting the very best and innovative of Brazil’s art, design and craft, offering sustainable alternatives and demonstrating a commitment to the values of social responsibility. MIAMI INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT June 2012 - December 2012 South Terminal Gallery International Greeters Lobby and 4th floor level Mezzanine Featuring the innovative work of 23 artists, designers and artisans from Brazil, through ceramics, basketry, textiles, jewelry, furniture, and fashion, as well as selective examples of photography, painting and sculpture, Sem Fronteiras/Without Borders actively challenges conventional notions of a singular Brazilian aesthetic or identity. Each of the artists brings his or her own distinctive background, vision and cultural character to their work, resulting in a rather eclectic integration of design and craft that is, at once, Brazilian and global. Highlighted throughout the exhibition is the transformative power of community, the preservation of skills and traditions through product design and education, the use of natural materials and locally available resources, the conservation of the natural landscape and development of sustainable products, and the creative reuse of industrial waste. Through innovative partnerships and collaborations, many of the artists provide employment for whole families and communities, thereby vastly improving the standard of living for many. Communities are not only assisted economically but are empowered psychologically through their active participation in product development and fabrication. There is a sense of shared authorship in the creative process and final product. Boundaries are also eliminated between high art and craft, and among various disciplines; as such, an individual project may include photography and sewing, silkscreen and bookbinding, or painting and weaving. The artists represented here are playful and sometimes irreverent, but always aware of the importance of making work that is sustainable and connected to the earth, and work that also adds beauty and enchantment to everyday life. There is no separation between the functional and the beautiful. Collectively, Sem Fronteiras/Without Borders presents a vision of an art and design world that celebrates traditional culture as an evolving and growing element, one that can enhance and assimilate contemporary trends and, at the same time, provide a decent, sustainable living for communities. www.do-not-touch.com The Fine Arts and Cultural Affairs Division would like to express our gratitude to all of the artists who are participating in this exhibition, for the work they do to add beauty to the world and for their efforts to preserve endangered traditions and support communities. A very special thanks to Zoë Melo and Peter Scherrer from TOUCH, without whose assistance, expertise and persistence this exhibition would not have been possible. We would also like to acknowledge Thais Reiss and Antonio Pinto from Odebrecht for their support from the beginning when this exhibition was just a concept. And finally, we greatly appreciate the generosity and support provided by our partners and sponsors, and especially, the Consulate General of Brazil in Miami and the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau. Miami International Airport Division of Fine Arts & Cultural Affairs For more information, please contact 305.876.0749 or visit www.miami-airport.com The Hand Made program of the Division of Fine Arts & Cultural Affairs at Miami International Airport seeks to promote awareness and interest in a wide variety of cultures through the appreciation of handcrafts. MÔnica Nador Mônica Nador, currently an internationally renowned artist, was born in Ribeirão Preto, in the state of São Paulo, spending part of her teens in São José dos Campos. In the late 90’s, she began the work to which she is currently devoted, a project called, Painted Walls, in which her desire was “to break boundaries and expand the artistic intervention.” Through this project, Nador developed murals in poor neighborhoods in several peripheral cities in Brazil, encouraging residents to also paint the inside of their homes. She subsequently formalized the project through a collaboration with the community of Vila Rhodia, in São José dos Campos, a town very close to the city of São Paulo. After this experience, with the help of the World Bank, Nador traveled through Mexico, Cuba, India and Pakistan. Her experiences abroad, led to her formulation and creation of Jamac (Jardim Miriam Arte Clube), located in the south outskirts of São Paulo, a dynamic center which functions as a cultural and artistic space for experimentation and education within that community. Nador is represented by Luciana Brito Gallery in São Paulo. Sergio J. Matos Sergio J. Matos was born in Paranatinga, in the state of Mato Grosso, in the heart of Brazil. His birth in a region near the Xingu Indian reservation, surrounded by Indian culture and the great diversity of the forest, was significant in his development, teaching Matos an appreciation for the beauty of natural materials and how to work with them. Matos’ use of color and local resources provide his work with an identity that is singularly Brazilian. Conceptually, his pieces are inspired by childhood memories of Brazilian interiors, adding a traditional and historical context to his work. Matos has received extensive recognition and award for his designs, and has been included in important exhibitions in Brazil and abroad. COLLECTION Jalapa Collection Jalapa is a collaboration between Brazilian designer Marcelo Rosenbaum and the local chapter of the Brazilian Service for Support to Micro and Small Companies (SEBRAE). Its mission is to improve the social conditions of artisans and the quality of craft production while promoting the continuity of craft traditions. Its innovative products are made with the stems of a small flower that grows in the paths of state park “Jalapao”, the so-called “golden grass” of “capin dourado,” which are turned into fashion and home accessories by local artisans. The species with golden color stems does not grow anywhere else in the world, and the practice to turn it into products dates back to artisans descendent from African slaves who learned the craft from local indigenous communities. Its harvest is now regulated by the Tocantis state government to ensure the grass is only collected at the right time of the year – September. Cores da terra Selma Calheira, born in Bahia (Brazil) in 1958, initiated “Cores da Terra” in 1984 after completing her art studies and gaining initial work experience. She was in immediate demand from major professional institutions as a guest speaker and teacher due to her expertise in the field of natural pigments. “Cores da terra” means colors of the earth and refers to the pigments she uses in her ceramics. In the nineties, her works won international recognition following exhibitions in New York and at the Louvre, and during this time, she created her first giant ceramic apples, a design that has proved timeless. Today, her studio is a fully fledged company whose unique expertise is appreciated worldwide. Brunno Jahara Brunno Jahara is a product designer and artist born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. With a mix of Croatian and Lebanese, with Danish, Indian and Italian heritage and growing up in Germany, Holland, England, the U.S. and Brazil, Jahara is both a true Brazilian and a global citizen. After studying at the University of Brasilia and the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia, Jahara was selected to be part of Fabrica’s Design Department under the guidance of Spanish design star Jaime Hayon. At Fabrica, Jahara worked for several international clients such as Magis, Benetton, Koziol, Casamania and developed his personal collection for the Fabrica Features shops. Jahara has also exhibited widely, from Venice and Paris to Tokyo. Jahara’s designs often mix organic shapes with tropical inspiration and sometimes humor. This combination produces unique results, making every piece a special and collectible one. He works across diverse media, including but not limited to graphic applications, furniture, interiors and jewelry. Globally and locally inspired, Jahara’s work represents his own diverse background and his interpretation of the mixed multi-cultural society that we live in today. STUDIO NOTUS Rodrigo Braga França and Ulisses Neuenschwander, from Minas Gerais in southeastern Brazil, founded Notus in 2007, launching their own product line in 2011. Studio Notus’ principal mission is to create products that “break formalities,”and that evoke surprise and enchantment in the user. They achieve this through an innovative blend of references, unique forms and materials. Oferenda Design Oferenda Design is focused on sustainable products, combining high design and craftsmanship. The latest creations bridge design and craft using raw, recycled materials, with an emphasis on products that are whimsical and fun, and have multiple uses. The Chair is meant to be used at the dinner table or a desk, or as a decorative piece. Importance is placed on traditional techniques and the handmade as a means of acknowledging and renewing artistic traditions and time-honored techniques. Estudio Manus Estudio Manus, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, is where Caio de Medeiros and Daniela Scorza apply their experience in design, the visual arts and architecture, combining all of these ingredients to achieve unique and fresh results. They draw inspiration from popular Brazilian art and from traditional Brazilian handcrafts, creating new forms and new relationships for the creation of objects, furniture and architecture. An interesting feature of their work is their attempt to capture the past and what they refer to as “images of the collective unconscious,” reviving not only useful objects but re-inventing those that would normally be called “useless.” Ivone Rigobello An architect and landscape designer, Ivone Rigobello works out of her studio where she researches, creates and develops exclusive manual prints using natural fibers. Black and white colors are constants in her work, accompanied by subtle ranges of earth tones. Natural fibers such as jute, sisal, cotton and wool are the basic materials used to create a variety of objects such as carpets, placemats, cushions and decorative panels. Each piece is unique and made by hand. Rigobello has presented her work in important exhibitions and has created print collections inspired by indigenous and natural elements for such companies as Artes Aplicadas and Etna in Brazil. Alexandre Sequeira Alexandre Sequeira is a photographer but he says he is much more interested in people than in photography. The camera is only an instrument to get close to people. In one of his projects, he spent one year in an Amazon village working as a portraitist and where most of his subjects had never previously seen their photographic image. His series from the village of Nazaré de Mocajuba features portraits of the villagers printed on unconventional materials used in their daily lives – sheets, towels and mosquito netting, among other pieces of textiles. The idea of printing the pictures on the textiles was crucial to intimately associate the two forms – that is, to emphasize the relationship of the photographic image with the memory of how the textile was used by the individual. These portraits were then re-installed outdoors within the community and rephotographed. Sequeira is a professor at the Art Institute of Science at The Federal University of Pará in Belem do Pará in northern Brazil. He is an architect and a specialist in semiotics, using photography as a vehicle for interaction and exchange. GUETO ECODESIGN Gueto Ecodesign creates unique projects that maximize the use of solid industrial waste products to create beauty. By exploring the utilized materials’ intrinsic potential, value is placed on the raw material without the need for investment in new industrial processes, strengthening the concept of eco-efficient products. One of the Misses Collection, the Miss Ghana Ottoman, pictured here, is made from recycled EVA waste. This raw material provides the essence of the product. The ottoman has no rigid structure and is entirely supported by moorings, facilitating the assembly and separation of materials. Miss Ghana is a comfortable and entertaining product while encouraging environmental awareness. SEM FRONTEIRAS/WITHOUT BORDERS IÇA Project In the span of one week, the project, A Gente Transforma, led by Marcelo Rosenbaum, in partnership with the Group Mães Amigas da Casa do Zezinho (GMACZ), unfolded a new brand of handbags and accessories known as IÇA. The project employs several generations of women – mothers and daughters of seamstresses – thus providing sustainable income for these families. The material used in creating the line of bags and accessories is donated by Cipatex, a producer of plastic. To implement this sustainable business, IÇA works with a multidisciplinary team composed of graphic and interior designers and photographers. Rogerio Fernandes Ever since his childhood, Rogerio Fernandes has always had a very close relationship to art. Fernandes grew up in northeast Brazil watching the locals produce their woodcutting craft at local fairs. The art work was to him mythical and mystical and served as a catalyst for his own creative endeavors. He was also greatly influenced by the Brazilian folklore of Indians and slaves which he often would sketch as a child. After graduating as a designer, Fernandes went back to his childhood passion for the woodcuts of the northeast with their magical mystical feel and he learned to “let go” producing work that was more spontaneous and free. Returning to his roots has allowed his work to grow in light, fantasy and lyricism. COOPA-ROCA Rocinha Seamstress and Craftwork Co-operative Ltd., is a cooperative that trains, manages, and coordinates the work of female residents of Rocinha, who produce artisanal pieces for fashion and design markets. The Cooperative was established in the early 1980s, with the mission of providing the conditions for its members, female residents of Rocinha, to work from home, thereby contributing to their family budget without having to neglect their childcare and domestic responsibilities. COOPA-ROCA’s vision is to expand the social impact of its experience in Rocinha, becoming a national reference for the social integration of lowincome communities. Today the Cooperative includes approximately 100 artisans. An exhibition presenting the very best and most innovative of Brazil’s art, design and craft, offering sustainable alternatives and demonstrating a commitment to the values of social responsibility. Marcenaria Trancoso Trancoso – a small village in Bahia, northeastern Brazil – is beautifully located atop a green highland by the seashore, south of Porto Seguro, where the Portuguese first landed in the year 1500. Four centuries later, in the mid 70s, Trancoso was rediscovered and Porto Seguro and Trancoso have become one of the top tourist destinations in Brazil for Brazilians and foreigners alike. The influx of newcomers and tourists has sophisticated the region with beautiful homes and inns but Trancoso has kept its charm, simplicity and unique beauty unscathed. Christian Ullman Christian Ullman is a product designer, specializing in the development of products with the use of natural and renewable resources, everyday waste and recycled materials. He serves as a consultant for companies, institutions and governments, both within Brazil and throughout Latin America. Ullman is the recepient of numerous awards in Spain, Italy, Brazil and Argentina. Marcenaria Trancoso was founded in 2002 as a way to bring sophisticated ideas to simple construction techniques, creating a line of charming Brazilian products with an international appeal. Marcenaria Trancoso has since expanded its concept and product mix which now includes a variety of contemporary furniture, home decor accessories, porcelain and wooden tableware, natural fibers and textiles. A large part of their product line is now sourced from other regions in Brazil and their long-term commitment is to have all of their wood items made from either certified or recycled woods found in the tropical rainforest. In the past, local cultures had traditionally revolved around hunting as well as fishing and elementary boatbuilding which provided Trancoso natives an intimate relationship with its forests and unusual wood-crafting skills. Today, part of their woodwork and furniture is still produced in Trancoso, where modern concepts of design flourish in the skilled hands of expert local artisans. Renata Meirelles The work of Renata Meirelles moves between art and design. By experimenting with textiles, Meirelles creates pieces from raw materials that navigate through the overlapping territories of art, accessories and jewelry. Working in small and large scale pieces, her work maintains a sense of weightlessness and light. Meirelles has exhibited widely in museums throughout Brazil and also abroad, most notably, in Destination Brazil at the MoMa Design Store in New York and in Chroma and Piece Work Textile exhibition in Toronto. Carla Tennenbaum Carla Tennenbaum has a particular interest in vernacular craft and up cycling technologies for discarded or underdeveloped materials. Most recently she has focused on the development of products designed to reduce industrial waste of e.v.a. (ethyl-vinyl acetate), a very colorful material that presumably cannot be recycled and is commonly destined for Brazilian landfills. Her efforts have been awarded two international prizes: hOLAnDA 2003, given by the Latin American Design Foundation in Amsterdam, and first prize at Design 21International Design Contest 2005, promoted by UNESCO and Felissimo Group. In addition, Tennebaum has founded project EVAMARIA, which develops productive chains of material transformation using e.v.a. refuse as raw material for the creation of art pieces and functional objects, and employs partners/cocreators who are too impaired to make a living out of anything other than being artists. FETICHE DESIGN In 2008, Carolina Armellini and Paulo Biacchi founded Fetiche Design Studio (also known as Fetish Design for the Home), playing with and intermingling shapes, textures and color, and producing designs that are, at once, novel but classical. As their studio name implies, the concept of a “fetish” is intrinsic to their design philosophy. The dictionary defines “fetish” as an animate or inanimate object - made by humans or produced by nature - that is superstitiously believed to have magical powers and is worshipped. The team plays with this idea, attempting to imbue their objects with references and meanings beyond the formal and the functional. The Rocking Bench, reproduced here, is an ergonomic design that uses a weave pattern reminiscent of the garden seats of the designers’ childhood from the interior of Brazil. MANA BERNARDES Mana Bernardes is a jewelry designer, poet and visual artist from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Bernardes has been included in numerous exhibitions including Design + Social, organized by the Institute of PVC in Rio de Janeiro and Fashion without Frontiers at São Paulo Fashion Week SPFW. In 2005, the Campana brothers invited her to participate in the exhibition, J’en Rêve, at the Cartier Foundation in France. Through community education social projects with the Museum of Rio de Janeiro and the European Design Institute of Sao Paulo, Bernardes works with teenagers and students in Brazil teaching jewelry making and creative re-use. She sees luxury in seemingly unusable materials using mini-flasks, PET bottles, phone cards, toothpicks, hair clips, plastic netting, pearls & silver to create unique, modern jewelry crafted by hand. Domingos Tótora Domingos Tótora is extremely passionate about the preservation of the natural landscape and way of life in his hometown of Maria da Fe, Brazil. Tótora is an artist, a creator, and a designer. His design philosophy is deeply rooted in the principles of sustainability and renewable organic cycles. In a certified sustainable process, recycled cardboard is broken up into small pieces and turned into a pulp that serves as the base material for furniture, objects and sculptural pieces that are molded by hand, dried in the sun and finished to perfection. In this beautiful and labor-intensive process, the cardboard, which originated as wood, essentially is brought back full cycle by taking on a wood-like quality again. “Sustainability happens through actions and not words.” Project ASAS The project ASAS (Solidarity Craft from Aglomerado da Serra) is an award-winning initiative that started in 2007 as an extension of an academic design and craft project integrating several areas such as sewing, fashion, craft bookbinding, silkscreen, photography and management of bamboo. Under the coordination of Natacha Rena and Bruno Oliveira, the project seeks to elaborate additional productive processes with the intent to serve and strengthen a network in the Aglomerado da Serra (Belo Horizonte / Minas Gerais). Through the development of experimental proposals, a team of designers and artisans consolidate a multidisciplinary method of technical and creative training of income generation associated with the production of high value design and urban crafts. Currently, the ASAS develops many products such as notebooks, bags, scarves, pillows and toys, all inspired by the everyday slum itself. João Maciel João Maciel is a contemporary artist working in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. His sculptures integrate found objects and pieces of wood and furniture. He has exhibited on his own as well as participated in many group exhibitions in Brazil and Latin America.