Paulo BRUSCKY: The Gallery Will Be Fumigated of Art

6 April - 26 May 2018 London
Overview

On the occasion of the artist's first solo exhibition in London, 
the Gallery will be fumigated of art.

Por ocasião da primeira exposição individual do artista em Londres, 
a Galeria será fumigada pela arte.

 

Paulo Bruscky's (b.1949, Recife, Brazil) first solo exhibition in London offers a unique opportunity to explore the Brazilian artist's unique and radical artistic language through a display of over 200 works, crossing all media, created between the late 1960s until today. The exhibition follows a recent survey of his work at the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris and his inclusion in Viva Arte Viva at the 2017 Venice Biennale. 

Works
Installation Views
Press release

Paulo Bruscky's (b.1949, Recife, Brazil) first solo exhibition in London offers a unique opportunity to explore the Brazilian artist's unique and radical artistic language through a display of over 200 works, crossing all media, created between the late 1960s until today. The exhibition follows a recent survey of his work at the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris and his inclusion in Viva Arte Viva at the 2017 Venice Biennale. 

 

One of Brazil's most important contemporary artists, Bruscky was a pioneer of mail art in the 1960s and became associated with the Fluxus art movement in the 1970s. Influenced by the work of avant-garde artists Marcel Duchamp and John Cage, Bruscky’s practice resists straightforward classifications, boldly combining visual and literary language to voice his artistic identity and position within society. Since the late 60s, Bruscky has committed to an experimental approach which has combined his own performance and radical public interventions, with conceptual strategies of documentation and communication through collage, sculpture, artist books, 'poetic objects', classified and mail artworks, visual music and poetry.

 

Investigating the role of new media in art, Bruscky has developed a humorous, yet harshly critical commentary of local and international culture and politics. In 1982 he was awarded the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship in New York, where he worked for one year. Here, he developed some of his most important experimental works using Xerox machines, and employed the use of photocopies, blueprints, artist stamps and postal envelopes as a strategy to blur the boundaries of art, poetry and politics.

 

The exhibition at Richard Saltoun Gallery will be a unique opportunity to explore Bruscky’s radical language, through a major display of over 200 works, crossing all media, created between the late 1960s up until today.