Corisco

Juraci Dórea

Corisco, 1983150 x 100cmSign in to view price
Details
MaterialGallery
acrylic on canvasMartins&Montero
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This bold, black-and-white artwork features a striking combination of geometric shapes, intricate patterns, and abstract figures. The composition is divided into distinct sections, creating a dynamic and visually captivating piece. The artist employs a range of techniques, including sharp lines, bold contrasts, and repeating motifs, to craft a distinctive, almost tribal-inspired style. Despite the abstract nature of the subject matter, the artwork conveys a sense of energy and movement, inviting the viewer to engage with its rich symbolic language. The historical context and the artist's intention behind this piece likely reflect a broader exploration of cultural identity and the power of visual expression. ...

Similar Artworks
Silhouette 3
Talita ZaragozaSilhouette 3, 2024
76.2 x 182.88cm
Poison
Renaud JerezPoison, 2024
193 x 163 x 8cm
Arm
Ange-Frédéric KoffiArm, 2016
30 x 20cm
Untitled
Rita McgurnUntitled, 2000
189.2 x 64.8 x 35.6cm
Untitled
Untitled
V.A.C
Ange-Frédéric KoffiV.A.C, 2019
63 x 91.5cm
Navel IV
Jack O'BrienNavel IV, 2023
53 x 45 x 4cm
Agreste
Marlene AlmeidaAgreste, 2019
110 x 160 x 4.5cm
Untitled
Rita McgurnUntitled, 1990
38.1 x 48.3cm
Vodaphone
Ange-Frédéric KoffiVodaphone, 2015
75 x 50cm
Untitled, série Sinner Man
Untitled (waterfall)
Untitled
Rita McgurnUntitled, 1990
45.7 x 46.4cm
East
Talita ZaragozaEast, 2024
78.74 x 93.35cm
Kabakrou, série Sinner Man
Untitled (naphthol red)
Doubling Acts 3
Maryam HoseiniDoubling Acts 3, 2022
147.3 x 106.7 x 3.8cm
West
Talita ZaragozaWest, 2024
78.74 x 93.35cm
Terra como Alcobaça
Marlene AlmeidaTerra como Alcobaça, 2024
145 x 174 x 3.5cm
Untitled
Terral I (De la terre)
Lagos still life II
Untitled
Fred SandbackUntitled, 1970
21.6 x 27.9cm
Reenactment II
Untitled
South
Talita ZaragozaSouth, 2024
78.74 x 93.35cm
Juraci Dórea
Artist
Juraci Dórea
B.1944, Brazilian

To study architecture, in the 1960s Juraci Dórea moved from Feira de Santana to Salvador, where he witnessed the intense cultural production that arose there out of the encounter between the experimental vanguardist attitude and the singular experience of a territory steeped in an Afro-Brazilian heritage. After earning his degree, Dórea returned to his hometown, the municipal seat of the metropolitan region of Portal do Sertão. There, he began to construct a consistent oeuvre, which gradually brought about a convergence of contemporary visual languages with backcountry roots and traditions. His Estandartes de Jacuípe [Banners of Jacuípe] (1975), for example, are rhythmed and symmetric abstract compositions made of treated cowhide, sewn with the same processes used in the common production of saddles and clothing for cowboys. In the 1980s, Dórea’s telluric connection took on another power of magnitude. After beginning his Projeto Terra [Project Earth] (1982 - ), he not only assimilated backcountry artisanal know-how, but also traveled deep into the Bahian backcountry to implant his works in that landscape, often making use of the materials he found in the fields and pastures. Due to this new focus, the primary public of his work was no longer the urban visitor of cultural institutions but rather an audience consisting largely of backcountry dwellers. The records produced in this context, in the form of photographs, films, reports and texts, document not only Dórea’s creative trajectory, but also countless shocks and rearrangements between conceptions of art, language and territory. ...

Juraci Dórea: Artworks
Progetto Terra
Maquete I
Juraci DóreaMaquete I, 1998
32 x 15 x 15cm
Ecce Homo III
Ecce Homo IV
Ecce Homo V
Corisco
Juraci DóreaCorisco, 1983
150 x 100cm
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. ...

Unlock Price & Inquiry Access