Seduzir, 2002
“Pés no Chão,
Cabeça no Céu” (Feet on the Ground, Head in the Clouds) encompasses
thirty-five years of work in which, between the studio floor and the blue sky,
everything passed through the body of Helena Almeida. In the 60’s the artist
began questioning the material and conceptual elements that constitute the
definition of painting. In the 70’s she abandoned traditional modes of
depiction to undertake an array of practices whose point of departure is her
own body. It all begins “inside me” – “Dentro de Mim”, as the title of a series
of photographs from 2000-2001 says – not in the psychological sense of
subjectivity that expresses itself, but in the performative sense of material
(the body) presenting itself.
Almeida creates successive series of black-and-white
photographs of herself. The photos register moments of the action of moving
about, painting, or drawing in the studio – not painting or drawing by
traditional means, perhaps, but through actions that transform movements into a
work of art. In the series “Pintura
Habitada” (Inhabited Painting), 1975-77, and “Desenho Habitado” (Inhabited Drawing), 1975, we see the artist in
the act of painting or drawing, holding in her hand the brush or pencil from
which flow streams of blue paint or black thread that, above or emerging from
the surface of the photograph, possesses a real physical presence. The video Sente-me, Ouve-me, Vê-me (Feel me, Hear
me, See Me), 1978-80, reveals the performance dimension of the work that
precedes the photos.
Almeida’s transdisciplinary dynamic leads not only to
an abandonment of the traditional artistic practices but to the progressive
awareness of the necessity of making the passage from oneself to others. In the
“Inside Me” series, made by attaching mirrors to different parts of herself,
the body opens itself to reflect space, light, and everything that surrounds
it. In these images the movement of the body remakes the surrounding space, and
remakes itself, as body, through the absorption of that same space. The way the
author “installs” her body in the studio modifies what would otherwise be our
normal perception of space by generating an installation effect.
Almeida’s work explores questions such as: How is it
that the body and the movement of a body – that of the author – makes art? How
is it that during this process the body itself is what becomes art? And after
various forms of interaction (absorption, penetration, occultation, habitation)
between the body and the works of art that arise from it, what remains for art
besides the mark of a body’s passage? The answer to this last question lies
perhaps in the title of a recent series: “Seduzir”
(Seduce), 2002. In these photographs, we witness the peculiar staging of
certain poses that we can interpret as commentary on the stereotypes of
feminine seduction. But the most unsettling effect results from the artist’s
confronting us with the presence of her body in a manner that forces us, as
observes, to take cognizance of the place and limits of the action and power of
our own bodies.
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Texto traduzido para inglês por Clifford E. Landers e publicado na revista mensal Artforum, na edição de Setembro de 2004, por ocasião da exposição “Pés no Chão, Cabeça no Céu”, de Helena Almeida, no Centro Cultural de Belém, Lisboa, de 19 de Março a 6 de Maio, 2004.
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