Tepper Takayama Fine Arts
Boston
20 Park Plaza, Ste. 600
617-542-0607 FAX 617-542-0607
WEB
Carnaval in Canvas
dal 17/1/2002 al 27/3/2002
617-542-0557 FAX 617-542-0607
WEB
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Tepper Takayama Fine Arts


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Rogerio Reis



 
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17/1/2002

Carnaval in Canvas

Tepper Takayama Fine Arts, Boston

''Carnaval na Lona'' or "Carnival in Canvas'' is an ongoing photographic essay by the Brazilian photographer, Rogerio Reis. In 1987, Reis began photographing 3 distinct segments of Rio de Janeiro's street or ''Counter-Carnival'', as it has been called. He chronicles the downtown street carnival in the heart of the financial and political district characterised by ironic social and political themes, the extravagantly fanciful gay street carnival of the fashionable Ipanema district, and the more frugal or impromptu costumes of the decidedly unsophisticated, quasi-rural and impoverished Campo Grande area of Rio.


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Selections from ''Carnaval na Lona'' or Carnival in Canvas'' an ongoing photographic essay by the Brazilian photographer, Rogerio Reis, will be on exhibit at the Danforth Museum of Art, Framingham, Massachusetts, from January 17, through May 12, 2002, and at Tepper Takayama Fine Arts, Boston, Massachussetts from January 19, through March 29, 2002.

''Carnaval na Lona'' or Carnival in Canvas'' is an ongoing photographic essay by the Brazilian photographer, Rogerio Reis. In 1987, Reis began photographing 3 distinct segments of Rio de Janeiro's street or ''Counter-Carnival'', as it has been called. He chronicles the downtown street carnival in the heart of the financial and political district characterised by ironic social and political themes, the extravagantly fanciful gay street carnival of the fashionable Ipanema district, and the more frugal or impromptu costumes of the decidedly unsophisticated, quasi-rural and impoverished Campo Grande area of Rio.
These street revelries are gloriously irreverant, and satirical. They also permit, everyone who is so inclined, to have a brief moment of stardom or distinction.

Rogerio Reis works as an itinerant photographer employing a weathered and aged portable canvas for a backdrop. He sets up the canvas in the street, thus creating an instant studio, and photographs the revelers in these three locations. The subjects of the resulting powerful and haunting portraits, in most cases pose, for the photographer so that they may be seen for posterity as they wish to be perceived, letting the portraits create their identity.

The result of these years of documenting street carnival is a record of surpising depth and profundity, not only of carnival but of the recent social, political and economic history of Rio, Brazil in general, and of the rest of the world from the Brazilian perspective. It is a kaleidescopic vision of the heroes, anti-heroes, celebrities, politicians and political movements of the mid-1980's through the turn of the century. Mr. Reis's oeuvre has metamorphosised itself into an epic chronicle of these times. Occasionally the photographer and subject permit us to see the other reality, the street behind the ''studio'', as often happened in 19th century studio photographs.

Rogerio Reis is a distinguished photojournalist who frequently photographs the activities of e Brazil's President at home and abroad. He is the 1999 winner of Brazil's National Prize for Documentary Photography, and one of the founders of Brazil's first professional photo bank.

His work has been exhibited in Brazil, the U.S., London, France, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland, where his powerful ''Carnival on Canvas'', ''Man /Machine: Train Surfers'' series were critical successes. His photographs are in the permanent collections of the Danforth Museum of Art, Musee Francais de Photographie, the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, Museu de Arte de Rio de Janeiro, Museu de Arte de Sao Paulo, and the Worcester Art Museum, among others. Mr. Reis's work appears in the key reference book, ''A Song to Reality, Latin American Photography 1860-1993'' by Erika Billeter, published in a Spanish and an English language edition. His work has frequently appeared in magazines including ''Newsweek'' ''Geo'', ''Paparazzi'' and others. A monograph entitled ''Na Lona'' was published in September of 2001. by Editorial Aeroplano, Rio de Janeiro.

Tepper Takayama Fine Arts
20 Park Plaza, Ste.600
Boston, MA 02116 U.S.A.
617-542-0557
617-542-0607

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