打造巴西当代艺术的“新”,1960年代和1970年代

Elena Shtromberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

20世纪60年代和70年代巴西的展览历史为理解艺术先锋和当代艺术如何与社会和政治背景直接相关而展开提供了关键的参考点。在这关键的几十年里,开创性的展览阐明了巴西当代艺术的阶段,并重新定义了“新”对-à-vis艺术对象的概念。这些展览追溯了费雷拉·古拉尔(Ferreira Gullar)的n o-objeto (non-object, 1959)的发展历程,以及它走向以理念为基础的艺术作品的道路,这种冲动在整个20世纪60年代在美国和欧洲也很流行。巴西新首都Brasília的出现开启了20世纪60年代的艺术实践新模式,它推动了艺术与生活之间的界限,积极寻求观众的参与。这在艺术家hsamlio Oiticica和Lygia Clark的经典作品中得到了最充分的证明。到20世纪70年代,1964年军事政变后,艺术家和知识分子都宣布致力于追求民主,对前几十年乌托邦事业的挑战与政治激进主义交织在一起。20世纪70年代还见证了艺术与新信息和通信技术的高度接触,包括视频设备和计算机的使用。通过其展示的最重要时刻构建巴西当代艺术的历史,不仅将历史和政治背景的一些开创性的艺术家和这二十年的艺术品,但也向读者介绍这些艺术品构成的挑战,更传统的机构展示方法和用于解释它们的标准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Forging the “New” in Contemporary Art in Brazil, 1960s and 1970s
The history of exhibitions in Brazil during the 1960s and 1970s provides a key reference point for understanding how artistic vanguards and contemporary art unfolded in direct relationship to social and political contexts. The seminal exhibitions during these pivotal decades elucidate how the contemporary in Brazilian art stages and reframes conceptions of the “new” vis-à-vis the art object. The exhibitions in question trace the development of Ferreira Gullar’s não-objeto (non-object, 1959) and its path toward the idea-based artwork, an impulse that was prevalent throughout the 1960s in the United States and Europe as well. Inaugurated by the emergence of Brasília, Brazil’s new capital city in the formerly barren hinterlands of the state of Goiás, the 1960s witnessed a new model of artistic practice that pushed the boundaries between art and life, actively seeking out the participation of the viewer. This is most evidenced in the canonical work of artists Hélio Oiticica and Lygia Clark. By the 1970s, challenges to the utopian undertakings from the previous decades had become imbricated with political activism, as artists and intellectuals alike pronounced a commitment to the quest for democracy after the military coup of 1964. The 1970s also witnessed heightened artistic engagement with new information and communication technologies, including the use of video equipment and computers. Constructing the history of Brazil’s contemporary art via the most important moments of its display will not only historically and politically contextualize some of the groundbreaking artists and artworks of these two decades, but also introduce readers to the challenges that these artworks posed to the more traditional methods of institutional display and the criteria used to interpret them.
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