3Nos3
Elias Adasme
Sonia Andrade
Martha Araujo
Lenora de Barros
Paulo Bruscky
CADA (Colectivo Acciones de Arte)
Luis Camnitzer
Graciela Carnevale
Antonio Caro
Antonio Dias
Eugenio Dittborn
Leon Ferrari
Nicolas Franco
Anna Bella Geiger
Grupo de Arte Callejero
Graciela Gutierrez Marx
Voluspa Jarpa
Gastao de Magalhaes
Anna Maria Maiolino
Antonio Manuel
Cildo Meireles
Marta Minujin
Carlos Motta
Leticia Parente
Luis Pazos
Pedro Reyes
Lotty Rosenfeld
Yeguas del Apocalipsis
Horacio Zabala
Sergio Zevallos
Heike Munder
Aesthetic Strategies under Repressive Regimes in Latin America. The focus is on positions since the late 1960s that bear witness to how oppositionists worked-and often risked their lives-to offer resistance to the political systems. These pieces are presented in dialogue with works by contemporary artists from Central and South America.
3Nós3 (BRA) – Elías Adasme (CHI) – Sonia Andrade (BRA) – Martha Araújo (BRA) –
Lenora de Barros (BRA) – Paulo Bruscky (BRA) – CADA (Colectivo Acciones de Arte) (CHI)
– Luis Camnitzer (URU) – Graciela Carnevale (ARG) – Antonio Caro (COL) –
Antonio Dias (BRA) – Eugenio Dittborn (CHI) – León Ferrari (ARG) – Nicolás Franco (CHI)
– Anna Bella Geiger (BRA) – Grupo de Arte Callejero (ARG) – Graciela Gutiérrez Marx
(ARG) – Voluspa Jarpa (CHI) – Gastão de Magalhães (BRA) – Anna Maria Maiolino (BRA)
– Antonio Manuel (BRA) – Cildo Meireles (BRA) – Marta Minujín (ARG) – Carlos Motta
(COL) – Letícia Parente (BRA) – Luis Pazos (ARG) – Pedro Reyes (MEX) – Lotty Rosenfeld
(CHI) – Yeguas del Apocalipsis (CHI) – Horacio Zabala (ARG) – Sergio Zevallos (PER)
Curator: Heike Munder, (director, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst)
The exhibition
Resistance Performed—Aesthetic Strategies under Repressive Regimes in
Latin America
presents stratagems artists devised to articulate dissent. The focus is on
historic positions from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Uruguay since the
late 1960s that bear witness to how oppositionists worked—and often risked their
lives—to offer resistance to Latin America’s repressive political systems. The show highlights strategies of linguistic self-empowerment in the formats of performance art, interventions, and actions as practices of resistance. These pieces are presented in dialogue
with works by contemporary artists from Central and South America who address the
repercussions and lingering effects of dictatorial regimes. The selection is designed to
unearth positions that have sunken into obscurity and draw attention to others that have
not yet received the art-historical attention they merit.
The exhibition surveys forms of artistic resistance that emerged in the repressive systems of various
Latin American countries beginning in the late 1960s and traces their evolution over several decades. The artists under consideration pursued a variety of experimental and conceptual strategies.
The show’s main emphasis is on works that resort to performative stratagems to expose apparatuses
and structures of power with the attendant pressures to conform, restrictive rules, and regulatory
disciplines and highlight their manifestations in the public sphere, systems of communication, the
artist’s own body, and elsewhere. In the late 1970s and 1980s, artists including Elías Adasme
(b. Chile, 1955), Lotty Rosenfeld (b. Chile, 1943), and the collective CADA (Chile, 1979–1989;
Raúl Zurita, Fernando Balcells, Diamela Eltit, Lotty Rosenfeld, Juan Castillo) staged interventions,
actions, and performances in public settings to off er the paralyzed Chilean society a counter-narrative, the vision of an alternative to Pinochet’s military dictatorship. Rosenfeld traveled the world to
modify the markings on public roads to point out how dictatorial regimes usurped the public sphere
for their theatrics. The collective 3Nós3 (Mário Ramiro, b. Brazil, 1957; Hudinilson Jr., b. Brazil,
1957, d. Brazil, 2013; Rafael França, b. Brazil, 1957, d. USA, 1991) pursued similar aims with major
actions in the urban space of São Paulo that brought traff ic to a standstill. On the other hand, a
sculpture by the Brazilian Antonio Dias (b. Brazil, 1944) gestures toward the symbols of protest in
the public sphere and scrutinizes the paradoxical aspects of any demarcation of boundaries.
The performance and conceptual artist Marta Minujín (b. Argentina, 1943) and Cildo Meireles
(b. Brazil, 1948) created works that solicited the audience’s participation. To celebrate the restoration of democracy in Argentina, Minujín built a replica of the Parthenon out of 30,000 books that
had been banned under the dictatorship, including writings by Marx, Freud, Sartre, and Foucault. On
view for three weeks,
Partenón de Libros
(1983) was then dismantled and the books were redistributed to the public. Meireles put the channels of commercial distribution to his own purposes by
circulating banknotes and Coca-Cola bottles with his messages, turning consumers into active participants. The idea of planting information and works of art outside institutional structures was also
taken up by the Mail Art movement, represented by artists including Paulo Bruscky (b. Brazil, 1949)
and Graciela Gutiérrez Marx (b. Argentina, 1945). Under the Pinochet regime, Eugenio Dittborn
(b. Chile, 1943) created his own variant of Mail Art by producing the so-called
Airmail Paintings,
which he folded up and mailed to his correspondents.
Another scene of critical engagement that is central to the artistic investigations on display is the
human body as the touchstone of self-determination. A participatory installation by Martha Araújo
(b. Brazil, 1943) welcomes the visitors with instructions that animate them to probe the physical
limitations of their own bodies. The duo Yeguas del Apocalipsis (Pedro Mardones Lemebel, b. Chile,
1955, d. Chile, 2015; Francisco Casas Silva, b. Chile, 1959) and Sergio Zevallos (b. Peru, 1962)
create performance art that insistently explores the political dimension of gender and sexual identity
and the standards individuals are pressured to conform to. Gastão de Magalhães (b. Brazil, 1953)
examines the ways events and experiences become inscribed upon the body. Works by Sonia
Andrade (b. Brazil, 1935), Lenora de Barros (b. Brazil, 1953), Anna Bella Geiger (b. Brazil, 1933),
and Anna Maria Maiolino (b. Italy, 1942) add a feminist perspective to the exhibition.
Antonio Manuel (b. Portugal, 1947), who lives in Brazil, uses the strategy of appropriation to
study the dimensions and repercussions of media infiltration. In 1973, he altered the title pages of
the tabloid
O Dia, inserting his own content to subvert one of the most effective and popular organs
of propaganda—the daily press.
The Archivo Tucumán Arde, parts of which are on view, documents
the dynamic that the press’s role in the dissemination of opinion unleashed for a new artistic practice
of political activism. Cofounded and still led by Graciela Carnevale (b. Argentina, 1942), the archive
illustrates the developments, radicalization, and politicization of a generation of Argentinean artist-
activists and the theoretical context of their work. Luis Camnitzer’s (b. Germany, 1937)
Uruguayan Torture Series
(1983/1984) is a memorial of another kind: the 35-part series of photo-gravures depicts the physical and psychological torment suffered by prisoners and commemorates
the fates of the artist’s friends. Horacio Zabala (b. Argentina, 1943), meanwhile, proposes utter
refusal as the last resort. His drawings imagine the gloomy dystopian architecture of a future in
which life is possible only in underground colonies cut off from any communication with the outside
world.
Younger artists who grew up with the oppressive legacy of the era’s dictatorial regimes, including
the collective Grupo de Arte Callejero (est. Argentina, 1997—Lorena Bossi, Carolina Golder,
Mariana Corral, Vanesa Bossi, Fernanda Carrizo) and Nicolás Franco (b. Chile, 1973) and Voluspa
Jarpa (b. Chile, 1971) have made it their mission to keep the memory of their countries’ repressive
regimes from being forgotten and draw attention to their lasting consequences. Carlos Motta
(b. Colombia, 1978) and Pedro Reyes (b. Mexico, 1972) address contemporary issues and point
out how the repression of the past continues to affect the future.
Image: 3Nós3, Ensacamento, 1979, Courtesy of the artists and Galeria Jaqueline Martins
Press contact:
René Müller, Head of Press and Public Relations t +41 442772727 presse@migrosmuseum.ch
20.11.2015
6–9 p.m. Opening
6 p.m. Speech by Heike Munder (director, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst)
6–8 p.m. Children’s vernissage: The Atelier on the basement floor welcomes our little visitors with creative activities that playfully explore contemporary art (children ages 3 and up).
Migros Museum
Limmatstrasse 270 CH–8005 Zurich
Hours:
Tue/Wed/Fri 11 am–6 pm
Thu 11 am–8 pm
Sat/Sun 10 am–5 pm
Admission
Adults: CHF 12
Reduced: CHF 8
Thu from 5–8 pm: free admission