PLANISPHERE
PROJECTION I and II
Adhesive and painting | variable dimensions (2012)
Projeção I and Projeção II use the contours of a world map seen on two walls of the room. As if the projections were unfolding in adhesive vinyl on the floor, such planispheres are marked by latitudes and longitudes, absent in the wall representation.
Inventário de Águas – Lagos/Lagoas (Inventory of Waters – Lakes/Lagoons) and Inventário de Águas – Rios (Inventory of Waters – Rivers) meanwhile makes use of architectural templates – cut out in usually blue-coloured, translucent acrylic – to record the principal river basin and lakes/lagoons in Brazil. Through the four sheets of overlapping acrylic, the compositions make use of the cut out spaces, playing with the colours and transparency and the fragile materiality to create a cartography that tangibly ceases to provide any precise reproduction of that which originally gave rise to their creation.
In Projeção I and Projeção II, the same procedure is adopted: the representations of the globe function now as windows (on the walls), now as projections or virtual places of edges and boundaries stripped of their primary function (on the floor).
This re-presentation of systems made by Camargo ends up scrambling the most incisive, regular and surefire notions that surround us. If maps – now, through mobile devices, more omnipresent and everyday than ever – are human constructions also created to facilitate understanding of the surrounding area and with structural frameworks that are currently compromised – due to scientific postulations now seen as dubious and political doctrines in rapid decline, for example – what does the artist actually want to discuss? “Where representation of the world fails and cannot cope with reality, but indicates something of it, even if piecemeal, drawings stem from precise references, but perform no function at all”, she states.
(Text excerpt by Mario Gioia on “Planisphere” exhibition, in 2012)
PHOTOS BY GUI GOMES
INVENTORY OF WATERS – LAKES AND LAGOONS (A STUDY FOR A BRAZILIAN ATLAS)
Drawings cutout in acryl | 88x130cm (2012)
INVENTORY OF WATERS – RIVERS (A STUDY FOR A BRAZILIAN ATLAS)
Drawings cutout in acryl | 87x75cm (2012)
“Through the four sheets of overlapping acrylic, the compositions make use of the cut out spaces, playing with the colours and transparency and the fragile materiality to create a cartography that tangibly ceases to provide any precise reproduction of that which originally gave rise to their creation.” [Mario Gioia]