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Thomas Erben Gallery 516 West 20th Street, NY 10011-2820 New York
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U.S.A.
Tel.++1 (212) 6458701
Fax++1 (212) 6459630
Contact: Thomas Erben / Louky Keijsers
E-mail: info@thomaserben.com
web www.thomaserben.com
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Thomas Erben Gallery |
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Helena Almeida Pintura Habitada
Helena Almeida Pintura Habitada and others works, 1975 - present. Helena Almeida’s first solo exhibition in the US surveys her black and white photoworks from 1970s to the present. Almeida, now 67, is considered an important Portuguese artist whose work as been widely exhibited in Europe over the past 30 years. Pintura Habitada (Inhabited Painting), a series of photographic portraits from 1975, depicts the artist half-length and from behind, holding a paintbrush, her face and figure reflected in a mirror larger than the photograph’s surface. Into the space of the image she has inserted blue brushstrokes as if executed by her photographic self, sometimes obliterating her face, sometimes commenting on the interrelation of the depicted selves. In this pivotal work Almeida combined photography and painting, exploring the formal tension between the flat factuality of acrylic paint and the illusionistic photographic space. Created within the context of ‘70s feminist movements, the work reflects the current ideas of the representation of the self and injects them into the cultural domain of painting. Almeida photographs exist in concert with those of Vali Export from the same period, in which Export treated her body as part of an urban landscape – made the equivalent of the line of a crosswalk, for example – using additional painting to produce a visceral psychological impact. Whereas artists such as Adrian Piper, Hannah Wilke and Martha Rosler entered the public or cultural space through their performances, Almeida creates almost all of her work in her studio. There, she stages a fictional body in a black dress, reminiscent of traditional Portuguese women’s wear, at time disfiguring the garment with paint or additional fabric. The reduction of the photograph’s tonality to rich black and white and the obliteration of almost all detail further abstracts the images emphasizing volume and shape. In A Casa (At Home) from 1982, a work measuring 6’ x 4 ‘, Almeida’s moving silhouette trails a slightly spiralling black tail ending in the shape of a house. Dentro de Mim (Inside of Me) from 2000 shows a cropped image of the barefoot artist. She presents the underside of the left foot to the viewer on which rests a rectangular mirror. The juxtaposition of the floor’s notches with their reflection in the mirror creates a distorted space reminiscent of Russian Constructivism. Her exploration of the self combined with the reduction of the visual language makes the work unique and instantly recognizable. The essential formalism which Almeida has developed in the private chamber of her studio space, gives her work its strength and immediacy.
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