Exhibit Videobrasil 30 Years in Cape Town

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posted on 06/09/2014
Cape Town is hosting a show that trace back the history of video throughout the three decades of the Contemporary Art Festival Sesc_Videobrasil. The exhibition was showed in Johannesburg

For the first time, Videobrasil is taking to South Africa an exhibit retracing the history of video within the arts context. In Johannesburg and Cape Town, Videobrasil 30 Years is featuring artworks that provide an overview of the technical possibilities, aesthetical propositions and political intentions of video. Curated by Solange Farkas, the show features 20 pieces by Brazilian and international artists who have taken part in different editions of the Contemporary Art Festival Sesc_Videobrasil. They are: Ali Cherri, Akram Zaatari, Bouchra Khalili, Cao Guimarães, Eder Santos, Fernando Meirelles, João Moreira Salles, Lenora de Barros, Liu Wei, Marcellvs L., Kiko Goifman, and Wagner Morales, among others. The first city to host the show was Johannesburg, from June 26 to 28, at The Bioscope Independent Cinema. In August, the show is feature in Cape Town, from August 13 to 15, at Labia Theater.

Organized into historical axes spanning the Festival’s three decades, the show Videobrasil 30 Years opens with the program The 80s: Experimental Practices, comprising artwork from the Festival’s first editions. Throughout Brazil’s political opening process, local video production was closely connected with documentary and television language. At that time there emerged early experiments with electronic media and video art. The first video pieces by filmmaker Fernando Meirelles – famous for his feature films City of God and Blindness – date from that period, including Marly Normal, which he co-directed with Marcelo Machado. The program will also include videos by the Brazilian artists Rafael França, Reencontro; Lenora de Barros and Walter Silveira, Homenagem a George Segal; Eder Santos, Mentiras e Humilhações; Walter Silveira and Pedro Vieira, VT Preparado AC/JC; and Sandra Kogut, Juliette.

The second phase of the Festival is represented in The 90s: Between Cinema and the Visual Arts, depicting a period when Brazilian artists gained prominence. Artworks from this period are hybrid in character, connecting cinema, visual arts, and the first telltale signs of a digital age. This program includes: Poesia é Uma ou Duas Linhas, e por Trás uma Imensa Paisagem, by João Moreira Salles; Janaúba, by Eder Santos; O Menino, a Favela e as Tampas de Panela, by Cao Hamburger; Tereza, by Kiko Goifman and Caco Souza; O Beijoqueiro, by Carlos Nader.

The show caps off with the program 21st Century: Consolidation of a Language. During this phase, the Festival became established as an international platform for mapping and disseminating art production from countries in the geopolitical South, gradually coming to embrace all contemporary languages. This period saw an even stronger consolidation of video in the realm of arts, with works that flirt with other languages – such as painting, photography, performance -, both formally and conceptually. Artworks by Brazilian artists will be featured, such as Não há Ninguém Aqui # 1, by Wagner Morales; Nanofania, by Cao Guimarães; A MAN. A ROAD. A RIVER, by Marcellvs L; as well as Cows, by Argentina’s Gabriela Golder; Red Chewing Gum and Un Cercle Autour du Soleil, respectively by Lebanon’s Akram Zaatari and Ali Cherri; Vue Panoramique, by Morocco’s Bouchra Khalili; and Unforgettable Memory, by China’s Liu Wei. Check out the synopses at the bottom of this text.

Videobrasil 30 Years is the third show held this year in a bid to publicize and circulate works from the Videobrasil Collection. Prior to South Africa, the show has featured in the United States (Atlanta) and Poland (Warsaw). The event counts on support from the University of California, which will simultaneously host an academic event that will bring together scholars, artists and researchers from around the world to discuss global issues from the South’s perspective – the Johannesburg Workshop in Theory and Criticism (JWTC). Videobrasil will participate in the JWTC, highlighting the contribution and research work on Videobrasil Collection works relating to the theme of the this year’s Workshop: “Archives on Non-Racialism.”

For additional information about Videobrasil on JWTC, click here.


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VIDEOBRASIL 30 YEARS | South Africa

IN CAPE TOWN
August 13, 14 and 15, 2014
Labia Theater
68 Orange Street, Gardens, Cape Town, South Africa 
Phone 021 424 5927
www.labia.co.za

IN JOHANNESBURG 
June 26, 27 and 28, 2014
The Bioscope Independent Cinema
286 Fox Street.  Johannesburg, South Africa
Phone 011 039 7306
www.thebioscope.co.za

SCHEDULE

PROGRAM 1 | The 80’s: experimental practices (1h11’)
June 26 | 7h30 pm
August 13 | 6h15 pm

Marly Normal | 06’54’’

Fernando Meirelles, Marcelo Machado | Olhar Eletrônico | 1983


The routine of a clerk in the city of São Paulo is shown in detail. The solitude of the character is eased by the television set, which also works as a dream machine. The ticktack of the clock, stretching over the entire video, underlines the frenetic pace of big cities.

Reencontro | 7’50’’

Rafael França | 1984


The first part of a trilogy that investigates the narrative language of video. A lonely man is confronted with his own traumatic past and mortality. Confusing the narrative conventions, the video does not feature synchronised sound or linear plot. The experimental narrative language reflects the human post- modern condition and the complicated negotiations between emotion and modernity.

Homenagem a George Segal | 3’31”

Lenora de Barros e Walter Silveira | 1985


Performance by the artist Lenora de Barros. Facing the camera, she brushes her teeth vigorously and the foam overflows, covering her face and finally her entire head.

VT preparado AC/JC | 10’
Walter Silveira, Pedro Vieira | TVDO | 1986


Experimental video art piece inspired by the work of the poet Augusto de Campos and the multimedia artist John Cage, featuring scenes recorded during the 18th São Paulo Art Biennial. Featuring appearances by Waly Salomão, Décio Pignatari and Haroldo de Campos.

Heróis da Decadên(s)ia | 35’27’’

Tadeu Jungle, Walter Silveira | TVDO | 1987


Experimental video featuring the poets Waly Salomão, Roberto Piva and Walter Silveira and a statement from Dom Paulo Evaristo Arns. Includes footage of the singer Supla and actors Marcelo Mansfield and Giovanna Gold. Excerpts from Caetano Veloso’s famous speech at the São Paulo finals of the 1968 International Song Festival (Festival Internacional da Canção).

Juliette | 03’55’’

Sandra Kogut | ANTEVÊ | 1988


Music video for the song Juliette, by the songwriter Fausto Fawcett, featuring singer Fernanda Abreu, footage of Copacabana Beach, in Rio de Janeiro, and animated collages.

Mentiras e humilhações | 4’

Eder Santos | 1988


Video art piece based on Carlos Drummond de Andrade’s poem Liquidação. An elderly lady recites the poem as the camera travels through the rooms showing the furniture, the pictures on the walls, details of an uninhabited house. Awarded at the 6th Videobrasil.

PROGRAM 2 | Into the Art (video production between movies And visual art) (1h17’)
June 27 | 6h pm
August 14 | 6h15 pm 

Poesia é uma ou duas linhas, e por trás uma imensa paisagem | 9’28’’

João Moreira Salles | 1990


A tribute to poet Ana Cristina Cesar, from Rio de Janeiro, featuring quotes by Charles Baudelaire, Sylvia Plath, Czeslaw Milosz, T. S. Eliot, Armando Freitas Filho, Cacaso, Carlos Drummond de Andrade and Manuel Bandeira, and music by Billie Holiday.

Janaúba | 17’45”

Eder Santos | 1993

A recreation of a scene from Mário Peixoto’s film Limite - in which a boat slowly crosses a river with a couple on board - serves as point of departure for this poetical narrative about life in the Brazilian countryside. Janaúba is the name of a city in the state of Minas Gerais, near the border with Bahia. Award-winning video at the 10th Festival Videobrasil.

O Menino, a favela e as tampas de panela | 5’

Cao Hamburger | 1995


A boy who steals cooking pot lids from his home and from a neighbor’s flees through alleys, staircases and dead-ends in São Paulo’s Paraisópolis favela. Brazilian episode of the Abra a porta (Open the Door) series.

Tereza | 16’

Kiko Goifman, Caco Souza | 1992


Tereza, a word that has multiple meanings in jail life, guides this documentary on inmates and their stories. The video includes texts by Jean Genet, Percival de Souza and S. Paezzo, and statements from the prisoners; the video was shot at Penitentiary 1 and Campinas’ Police Precinct 5.

O Beijoqueiro | 29’15’’

Carlos Nader | 1992


Documentary about a “serial kisser” whose “victims” number over a thousand people, including Frank Sinatra, Pope John Paul II and Pelé. The kisser is seen as the unconscious heir to a Brazilian anthropophagic tradition. In the impossibility of eating the people he admires, he kisses them.

PROGRAM 3 | 21st century: The consolidation of a language (1h13’)
June 28 | 6h pm
August 15 | 6h15 pm

Não há ninguém aqui # 1 | 04’09’’

Wagner Morales | 2000


A fictitious male character places an ad in the lonely hearts section of the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper. The responses to this ad were taped on an answering machine and later were used for the script to the video. The images of women randomly picked talk both of surveillance cameras as well as of an amorous search.

Cows | 4’10”

Gabriela Golder | 2002

Rosario, Argentina, March 25th, 2002. About 400 people slaughtered cows that minutes before had spread on the asphalt when the truck they were being transported in fell down.

Red Chewing Gun | 10’47’’

Akram Zaatari | 2000

In the form of a letter, the video reflects on the consumption and production of images, but also on the end of the relationship between two men. The story of their separation is located in the context of the urban landscape under alteration in Hamra, a Lebanese neighbourhood that was once an effervescent commercial center.

Nanofania | 3’27”

Cao Guimarães | 2003


Visual and sound composition of micromoments.

A MAN. A ROAD. A RIVER | 09’54’’

Marcellvs L. | 2004


The swelling of a river, which floods part of a road and interrupts the normal flow of people and cars, is the subject of this visual poem, a portrait of a crossing of paths and lives and of the force of nature over artificiality.

Un Cercle autour du soleil | 15’33’’

Ali Cherri | 2005


As the camera slowly reveals the ruins of Beirut, the author’s voice describes the intimate presence of the Lebanese civil war throughout his childhood and speaks of the discovery of subjectivity during nighttime bombardments. Winner of the FAAP Digital Arts Prize.

Vue Panoramique | 14’48”

Bouchra Khalili | 2005


Vue Panoramique draws a circular path between two shores. We see the comings and goings of a boat, the languid rolling of anchored craft, the activity of the passengers, and the wait. At the same time, a female voice describes a wander through a village surrounded by the sea.

Unforgettable memory | 10’15”

Liu Wei | 2009


The artist tries to recover his memory of 1989, when the Chinese took to the streets to protest against the Deng Xiaoping government. Wei heads out in search of witnesses, carrying with him a camera and a photo of the protests, during which he was almost killed. using direct language, the work questions the power of memory in the face of indifference.