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30 January – 28 March 2002
Adriana Varejão fills the Lower Gallery with a monumental wall based installation, Macau Wall,
while the Upper Gallery houses new individual floor and wall based
work. The fine colour gradations that enliven the apparent chromatic
uniformity of Varejão’s recent painting evoke the traditions of
Minimalism or monochrome painting. However, her work is not a strict
exercise in abstract painting, but rather a representation of a surface
clad in tiles.
Throughout her work Varejão has pursued a common
pattern of research, examining the complex history of Brazil. The rich
Baroque imagery of her earlier work replicated techniques for making
such things as porcelain, tiles and tattoos, all of which were imported
to Brazil from other cultures. Varejão is also fascinated by old
methods of medical treatment and often in her work the canvas ruptures
or is cut to expose a bodily interior of fleshy sculptural elements.
"My
fiction does not belong to any time or place, instead it is
characterized by themes dealing with rupture and discontinuity. These
are stories about the body, about medicine, about painting, about
Brazil, about tattoos, about Ming, Song or Iznik ceramics, about old
tiles, either Portuguese or Delft, and also about modern and ordinary
tiles, about maps, books, lacquers. Everything is contaminated. In my
work, the formation of Brazilian culture from the colonial period
onwards is used as a metaphor for the modern world. The works included
in the “jerked-beef” series are like contemporary ruins, canvases of
wall and rubble that end up losing their stony, insensitive, hard and
inhuman nature and become flesh."
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