VIDEO LINKS BRAZIL
An Anthology of Brazilian Video Art, 1981–2005
Friday 23 March – Sunday 25 March 2007

Tate Modern

 

http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/eventseducation/film/videolinksbrazilanantholo
gyofbrazilianvideoart19812005.htm

Video Brazil is a survey of the experimental single-channel video scene in
Brazil. Starting with work from the 1980s, this three-part programme brings
together an emblematic selection of tapes by some of the country's key video
artists and includes both early and emerging work. The programme offers a
diachronic perspective on the trajectory of the artistic, critical and
factual use of video technology in Brazil.


Influenced by conceptualism, Tropicália, the revolutionary project of Cinema
Novo, televisual syntax and forms of popular culture, Brazilian artists have
incorporated video into their practice since the 1970s, when a handful of
multi-disciplinary figures assimilated the nascent media. But it was in the
1980s, with wider availability of video cameras and within the context of a
new democratic socio-political conjuncture created by the end of the
military government, that video technology took root in the cultural and
artistic arenas.


As in other countries, video was embraced in Brazil for its immediacy,
availability, potential as a community tool for social change and
affordability for artistic exploration. As a hybrid medium, it has been
appropriated for performance-based works, media critique, social
portraiture, poetic, plastic and narrative experiments. With these facts in
mind, this series has been designed as a point of intersection where these
electronic texts can converge, reflect on each other and instigate fresh
readings.


Curated by Antonio Pasolini.


Presented with support from Arts Council England and The Embassy of Brazil
in London

 


Programme 1: Early Work
Friday 23 March 2007, 19.00
Programme duration 75 min
Introduction by the curator and presentation by the artist Simone Michelin

Focusing mainly on the work of the 1980s 'independents', this programme
includes key videos by groups such as TVDO and TV Viva alongside more
personal works and Vincent Carelli's project with native tribes. These
pieces reflect the post-military democratic conjuncture in Brazil and the
vibrant cultural scene it spawned.



Programme 2: Pause and Reflect
Saturday 24 March 2007, 19.00
Programme duration  75 min
Introduction by the curator and presentation by the artist Simone Michelin
This eclectic programme of works by established and emerging artists who
explores body-centred video, authorial tapes, visual poetry, media, social
and historical experiments, as well as works that disrupt the traditional
cause-and-effect narrative binary. In their own way, these pieces aim at
engaging the viewer in reflection.


Programme 3: Documentary
Sunday 25 March 2007, 15.00
Programme duration 85 min

Introduction by the curator and presentation by Fiona Watson, from Survival
This programme comprises documentaries that break social barriers, establish
new dialogues and try to reveal Brazil's elusive character. From the streets
of São Paulo to the tribes in the outback, these tapes explore the
electronic medium's potential to articulate truth, or something like it.

 

 

all screenings at :

Starr Auditorium
Tate Modern, Bankside, London, SE1 9TG
Nearest Tube: Southwark / London Bridge / Blackfriars

Tickets to all screenings £5, booking recommended
Box Office: 020 7887 8888

www.tate.org <http://www.tate.org/> .uk

 

 

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