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Delson Uchôa
Geometria Vingada 2º Ato / Não posso esconder Mondrian -
Vingar certas Geometrias [Empowering certain Geometries]
Cristiana Tejo“What history or stories would we tell if, instead of a bone, which becomes an axe, which becomes a sword, which becomes a pistol, a cannon, a machine gun, and a bomb, we consider that the most important invention of humankind was the object made to contain other objects?” This is the question posed by anthropologist Ursula K. Le Guin in her book A Ficção como Cesta: uma Teoria [Fiction As a Basket: A Theory] [1]. That is, if we could learn to admire baskets – their weaving and their function in the (gathering) society they gave rise to – rather than the axe or the spear, and consequently the world that was created based on objects that kill and subjugate, then what could we retell, remake or redo? A history of art based on the basket is perhaps a narrative in which the home, the affections and what nourishes and moves the artist are more important than awards, amounts, biennials and the résumé.By making paintings with the addition of plant fiber – the basis of baskets, mats and houses of many of the many peoples who have existed since time immemorial in the territory that came to be called Brazil, and of many others who became part of it in the passage of centuries – Delson Uchoa spotlights weaving as the ancestral structure of this country. His paintings have always openly exalted his Northeastern origin, whether through the presence of the “strident” colors and lighting of Brazil’s Northeast, as pointed out by Paul Herkenhoff, or through countless symbolic and textual references. His return to his homecity of Maceió, after many years in Rio de Janeiro, was essential for the artist’s aesthetic vocabulary to come fully into its own. There is always a sense of unease when we talk about the Northeast in a city like São Paulo. Perhaps because of the counterpoint between a place that exposes the oppressive structures on which the country was founded and the metropolis that tries to embody the dream (or illusion?) of being modern. But as Bruno Latour aptly observed, we have never been modern… Beneath the district of Liberdade [which means “freedom” in Portuguese] there lies the Pelourinho [whipping post] and the first houses of freed enslaved people in what was the fringe of a small village in colonial times. But if modernity is a march that trampled, massacred, erased and decimated, why do they want to be part of it?Delson Uchoa’s painting is often a house, a skin, an inhabited painting. The geometry that structures much of his production in the last 20 years comes from the square patterns seen on the tiled floors of houses, a domestic geometry. The resin he uses as a basis in his painting ends up extracting the dust and residues of the house’s floor. The works featured here are based on other geometries, especially those present in Brazilian vernacular architecture, such as the oca (built of wood and straw), the dwelling made with wattle and daub (framework of interlaced thin branches daubed with clay or mud), the house made of rammed earth, as well as the platibanda-style houses of the Brazilian Northeast, a local rereading of an architecture from the Iberian Peninsula, supposedly from a Moorish origin. For people such as the Wayana, Tiriyó, Aparai and Yekuana, the outer covering of the arumã stalks resembles human skin; therefore, when woven, the fibers form the “skin” of the primordial woman as well as that of the fundamental supernatural beings [2]. The interweaving that Delson adds to his new painting thus refers to other houses and skins, other containers. It is a sort of cartography, a cultural and emotional localization of cities, elements, materials and patterns. Just as Piet Mondrian looks at the grid of New York’s urban layout and the circulation dynamics of the great city of the new empire, Delson Uchoa observes the geometric weave of the houses and the patterns of artifacts from the rural and backcountry regions of the Northeast, and paints their vibrations. But unlike Mondrian, who is astonished by the strange and the different, Delson dives fully into the essence of his own culture.The rural and backcountry lands are characterized by the resilience of the human and nonhuman beings alike. Not much used in Brazil, the word agreste in Portuguese bears specific connotations related to the dry climatic conditions and soil of Brazil’s Northeast. An intense struggle is needed, however, for life to survive in this territory. Despite all the setbacks, beings and things sprout forth. In the history of art based on the basket it is this geometry that should be empowered, while not forgetting Mondrian. -
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D E L S O N U C H Ô A“Xaxado”, 2023
acrílica e resina sobre fibra vegetal
acrylic and resin on plant fiber
97 x 185 cmView more details
38.18 x 72.83 in -
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D E L S O N U C H Ô A“Platibanda catraca”, 2019
acrílica e resina sobre fibra vegetal
acrylic and resin on plant fiber
110 x 325 cmView more details
43.3 x 127.9 in -
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Filmagem e Finalização: Matheus Marchetti e João Paulo Belentani (@cinereviva)
Delson Uchôa | Geometria Vingada 2º Ato / Não posso esconder Mondrian
27.05 - 24.06.2023
Luciana Brito Galeria
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Delson Uchôa
1956, Maceió, Brazil. Lives and works in Maceío, Brazil.The main object in Delson Uchôa’s research is light, which he identifies with his region of origin: the city of Maceió, in northeast Brazil. It is through light that the artist works with time, color, texture and transparency – as well as scale, since most of his paintings have monumental dimensions and take years to finish. He also studies the natural chromaticity of the flora and fauna of that region, which he combines with the Northeastern popular constructive geometry. Considered one of the main artists of the “80s Generation” of Brazilian painting, Delson also works with photography and sculpture – practices he considers as ways of constructing colors, that is, as extensions of painting.
With a degree in medicine received from the Federal University of Alagoas in 1981, Delson Uchôa studied painting at Fundação Pierre Chalita. He has held solo shows at renowned institutions such as the Museu Oscar Niemeyer (Curitiba, Brazil, 2023) Museu do Estado de Pernambuco (Recife, Brazil, 2022), Museu de Ecologia e Escultura (São Paulo, Brazil 2018), Ludwig Museum (Koblenz, Germany 2015), Centro Cultural São Paulo (São Paulo, Brazil, 2012), and Instituto Tomie Ohtake (São Paulo, Brazil 2003). He has participated extensively in national and international art biennials, such as those of Venice, São Paulo, Havana and Cairo, and his works figure in important collections, including those of Inhotim (Brumadinho, Brazil), the Museu de Arte Moderna do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), the Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo (Brazil), the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo (Brasil), the Vogt Collection (Berlin, Germany) and the York Stack Collection (Berlin, Germany).