ghost 2: words don't go there

Jota Mombaça

ghost 2: words don't go there, 20221006 x 145cmSign in to view price
Details
MaterialGallery
bleached linen, metal supportMartins&Montero
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This artwork features a large, white, draped fabric suspended from the ceiling in an empty, dimly lit gallery space. The fabric cascades down in smooth, flowing lines, creating a striking and minimalist visual display. The use of a single, neutral-toned material emphasizes the artwork's focus on form, texture, and the interplay of light and shadow. The artist's intention may be to explore the relationship between the material, space, and the viewer's perception, inviting a meditative and sensory experience. Overall, the piece showcases a refined, conceptual approach to contemporary sculptural installation. ...

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Artist
Jota Mombaça
Brazilian

Jota Mombaça is an interdisciplinary artist whose work derives from poetry, critical theory, and performance. The sonic and visual matter of words plays an important role in their practice, which often relates to anti-colonial critique and gender disobedience. Through performance, visionary fiction, and situational strategies of knowledge production, they intend to rehearse the end of the world as we know it and the figuration of what comes after we dislodge the Modern-Colonial subject off its podium. ...

Martins&Montero
Gallery
Martins&Montero
Brussels, São Paulo

Founded in São Paulo in 2011, Galeria Jaqueline Martins is a space for research, documentation and presentation of contemporary artistic production. It proposes collaborative curatorial strategies that foster dialogue between different generations and different cultural perspectives. One of its guiding principles is the encouragement of research-oriented conceptualist practices characterized by critical, even subversive, approaches. Since its inauguration, the gallery has developed a special program around the investigation of artistic productions carried out during the Brazilian military period – more specifically from the 1970s and 1980s. It promotes a historical revision of processes grounded on strong intellectual resistance, audacity and commitment to art and which transformed the artistic practice in the country, but nonetheless were neglected throughout the last decades. By integrating research and practice that confront the contemporary scene by means of its exhibition program, the gallery encourages the revival of the debate that conceives of artistic actions as contact zones for the exercise of aesthetic, social and political change. In 2020 the gallery opened its second exhibition space, in Brussels, aiming to expand our presence in Europe and to develop a multidisciplinary program that will foster connections between our artists and Brazilian art practices in an international context. ...

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