São Paulo Art Biennial

The São Paulo Art Biennial (Portuguese: Bienal de São Paulo) was founded in 1951 and has been held every two years since. It is the second oldest art biennial in the world[1] after the Venice Biennale (in existence since 1895), which serves as its role model.

São Paulo Art Biennial
GenreBiennale, focus on contemporary art
Begins1951
FrequencyBiennial, every two years
Websitehttp://www.bienal.org.br
São Paulo Biennial: Pavilhão Ciccillo Matarazzo

History

The Biennial was founded by the Italian-Brazilian industrialist Ciccillo Matarazzo (1898–1977). Since 1957, the São Paulo Biennial has been held in the Ciccillo Matarazzo pavilion in the Parque do Ibirapuera. The three-story pavilion was designed by a team led by architects Oscar Niemeyer and Hélio Uchôa, and provides an exhibition space of 30,000 m2. The São Paulo Bienal features both Brazilian and international contemporary art and is considered to be one of the most important large-scale art exhibitions in Brazil and South America.[2]

São Paulo 9 (1967)

After completing the 6th Bienal, the Fundação Bienal de São Paulo was created to take the exhibition forward, which until then had been organized (with great success) by the Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo - MAM-SP. And the pavilion the institution occupies - its home to this day - only began holding the Bienal exhibitions starting with its 4th edition in 1957. Since 1951, 32 Bienals have been produced with the participation of 170 countries, more than 16 thousand artists and almost 10 million visitors, making direct contact possible between the Brazilian public and the visual, theatrical and graphic arts, music, film, architecture, and other forms of artistic expression from around the world. The 1998 edition cost almost $12 million and drew nearly 400,000 visitors during a two-month run.[3] The 25th biennial was originally scheduled for 2000 but was delayed to 2002 after a gigantic exhibition marking the 500th anniversary of Brazil's discovery by the Portuguese was organized by former biennial president Edemar Cid Ferreira and booked into the Ciccillo Matarazzo pavilion.[4] That year, for the first time, the chief curator of the biennial was a foreigner, Alfons Hug from Germany.

The biennial's initial aim was to make contemporary art (primarily from Western Europe and the United States) known in Brazil, push the country's access to the current art scene in other metropolises, and establish São Paulo itself as an international art center. Naturally, the biennial always serves to bring Brazilian art closer to foreign guests.

Artists, works and countries

Title Date Directors / Curators Artists Works Countries
1st Bienal Oct 20 – Dec 23, 1951 President of MAM-SP: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Artistic Director: Lourival Gomes Machado

729 1854 25
2nd Bienal Dec 13, 1953 – Feb 26, 1954 President of MAM-SP: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Artistic Director: Sérgio Milliet

Technical Director: Wolfgang Pfeiffer

712 3374 33
3rd Bienal Jul 2 – Oct 12, 1955 President of MAM-SP: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Artistic Director: Sérgio Milliet

Technical Director: Wolfgang Pfeiffer

463 2074 31
4th Bienal Sep 22 – Dec 30, 1957 President of MAM-SP: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Artistic Director: Sérgio Milliet

Technical Director: Wolfgang Pfeiffer

599 3800 43
5th Bienal Sep 21 – Dec 31, 1959 President of MAM-SP: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Artistic Director: Lourival Gomes Machado

689 3804 47
6th Bienal Oct 1 – Dec 31, 1961 President of MAM-SP: Ciccillo Matarazzo

General Director: Mário Pedrosa

681 4990 50
7th Bienal Sep 28 – Dec 22, 1963 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

General Director: Mário Pedrosa

Consultants: Geraldo Ferraz, Sérgio Milliet, Walter Zanini (Plastic Arts);

Aldo Calvo, Sábato Magaldi (Theater); Jannar Murtinho Ribeiro (Graphic Arts)

625 4131 55
8th Bienal Sep 4 – Nov 28, 1965 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

General Director: Mário Pedrosa

Consultants: Geraldo Ferraz, Sérgio Milliet, Walter Zanini (Plastic Arts);

Aldo Calvo, Sábato Magaldi (Theater); Jannar Murtinho Ribeiro (Graphic Arts)

653 4054 54
9th Bienal Sep 22 – Dec 8, 1967 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Consultants for Plastic Arts: Alfredo Mesquita, Geraldo Ferraz,

Henrique E. Mindlin, Jayme Maurício, José Geraldo Vieira, Salvador Candia

956 4638 63
10th Bienal Sep 27 – Dec 14, 1969 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Art Technical Committee: Aracy Amaral, Edyla Mangabeira Unger,

Frederico Nasser, Mário Barata, Waldemar Cordeiro, Wolfgang Pfeiffer

446 2572 53
11th Bienal Sep 4 – Nov 15, 1971 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Art Technical Committee: Antonio Bento, Geraldo Ferraz, Sérgio Ferro

351 2459 57
12th Bienal Oct 5 – Dec 2, 1973 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Technical Secretariat: Antonio Bento, Bethy Giudice, Ciccillo Matarazzo,

Mário Wilches, Vilém Flusser

468 2484 49
13th Bienal Oct 17 – Dec 14, 1975 President of Bienal: Ciccillo Matarazzo

Council for Art and Culture: Aldemir Martins, Isabel Moraes Barros,

José Simeão Leal, Norberto Nicola, Olívio Tavares de Araújo,

Olney Krüse, Wolfgang Pfeiffer

280 1579 43
14th Bienal Oct 1 – Nov 30, 1977 President of Bienal: Oscar Landmann

Council for Art and Culture: Alberto Beuttenmüller, Clarival do Prado Valladares,

Leopoldo Raimo, Lisetta Levi, Marc Berkowitz, Maria Bonomi, Yolanda Mohalyi

302 476 36
15th Bienal Oct 3 – Dec 16, 1979 President of Bienal: Luiz Fernando Rodrigues Alves

Cultural Advisor: Carlos von Schmidt

Council for Art and Culture: Casimiro Xavier de Mendonça, Emmanuel von

Lauenstein Massarani, Esther Emílio Carlos, Geraldo Edson de Andrade,

João Cândido Martins Galvão Barros, Pedro Manuel Gismondi,

Radha Abramo, Wolfgang Pfeiffer

158 302 43
16th Bienal Oct 16 – Dec 20, 1981 President of Bienal: Luiz Diederichsen Villares

General Curator: Walter Zanini

Curators: Petrônio França, Agnaldo Farias, Samuel Eduardo Leon, Cacilda

Teixeira da Costa, Gabriela Suzana, Julio Plaza, Annateresa Fabris,

Victor Musgrave, Josette Balsa / Associate Curators: Roberto Sandoval,

Cida Galvão, Marília Saboya, Renata Barros

213 1766 32
17th Bienal Oct 14 – Dec 18, 1983 President of Bienal: Luiz Diederichsen Villares

General Curator: Walter Zanini

Curators: Julio Plaza, Berta Sichel, Walter Zanini, Rui Moreira Leite,

Gino Di Maggio, Norberto Nicola / Cinema Curators: Agnaldo Farias,

Samuel Eduardo Leon

187 1650 43
18th Bienal Oct 4 – Dec 15, 1985 President of Bienal: Roberto Muylaert

General Curator: Sheila Leirner

214 1674 45
19th Bienal Oct 2 – Dec 13, 1987 President of Bienal: Jorge Wilheim

General Curator: Sheila Leirner

Curators: Ivo Mesquita, Sônia Salzstein-Goldberg, Gabriela S. Wilder,

Arturo Schwarz, Rafael França, Joice Joppert Leal, Angela Carvalho,

Ana Maria Kieffer

215 1740 53
20th Bienal Oct 14 – Dec 10, 1989 President of Bienal: Alex Periscinoto

Curators: Carlos von Schmidt (International), Stella Teixeira de Barros

(National), João Cândido Galvão (Special Events)

143 1824 41
21st Bienal Sep 21 – Dec 10, 1991 President of Bienal: Jorge Eduardo Stockler

General Curator: João Cândido Galvão

Curators: Ana Helena Curti, Gloria Cristina Motta

144 1028 32
22nd Bienal Oct 12 – Dec 11, 1994 President of Bienal: Edemar Cid Ferreira

Curator: Nelson Aguilar

206 972 70
23rd Bienal Oct 5 – Dec 8, 1996 President of Bienal: Edemar Cid Ferreira

General Curator: Nelson Aguilar

Associate Curator: Agnaldo Farias

134 1181 75
24th Bienal Oct 3 – Dec 3, 1998 President of Bienal: Julio Landman

General Curator: Paulo Herkenhoff

Associate Curator: Adriano Pedrosa

326 1140 54
25th Bienal Mar 23 – Jun 2, 2002 President of Bienal: Carlos Bratke

General Curator: Alfons Hug

Brazilian Nucleus Curator: Agnaldo Farias

194 546 68
26th Bienal Sep 25 – Dec 19, 2004 President of Bienal: Manoel Francisco Pires da Costa

General Curator: Alfons Hug

141 400 61
27th Bienal Oct 7 – Dec 17, 2006 President of Bienal: Manoel Francisco Pires da Costa

General Curator: Lisette Lagnado

Co-curators: Adriano Pedrosa, Cristina Freire, José Roca, Rosa Martínez

Guest Curator: Jochen Volz

118 645 51
28th Bienal Oct 26 – Dec 6, 2008 President of Bienal: Manoel Francisco Pires da Costa

General Curator: Ivo Mesquita

Associate Curator: Ana Paula Cohen

41 54 20
29th Bienal Sep 25 – Dec 12, 2010 President of Bienal: Heitor Martins

Chief-curators: Agnaldo Farias, Moacir dos Anjos

Guest Curators: Chus Martinez, Fernando Alvim, Rina Carvajal,

Sarat Maharaj, Yuko Hasegawa

159 850 40
30th Bienal Sep 7 – Dec 7, 2012 President of Bienal: Heitor Martins

Curator: Luis Pérez-Oramas

Associate Curators: André Severo, Tobi Maier

Assistant Curator: Isabela Villanueva

111 3796 31
31st Bienal Sep 6 – Dec 7, 2014 President of Bienal: Luis Terepins

Curators: Charles Esche, Pablo Lafuente, Nuria Enguita Mayo,

Galit Eilat, Oren Sagiv

Associate Curators: Benjamin Seroussi, Luiza Proença

69 81 34
32nd Bienal Sep 7 – Dec 11, 2016 President of Bienal: Luis Terepins

Curator: Jochen Volz

Co-curators: Gabi Ngcobo, Júlia Rebouças, Lars Bang Larsen, Sofía Olascoaga

81 415 33
33nd Bienal Sep 7 – Dec 9, 2018 Curator: Gabriel Perez-Barreiro

Bienal to Bienal

27. São Paulo Art Biennial - 2006

1st Bienal de São Paulo (1951)

The first Bienal was held by the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo (MAM-SP) in a temporary pavilion located on the Belvedere Trianon, in the neighborhood along Paulista Avenue. Abraham Palatnik’s first Aparelho cinecromático (1949) was initially rejected by the selection committee on the grounds that it did not fit any of the established categories, though the work was later accepted and awarded an honorable mention by the international jury.

2nd Bienal de São Paulo (1953)

Known as the “Guernica Bienal”, in reference to Pablo Picasso’s 1937 masterpiece, the 2nd Bienal is by far one of the most memorable editions of the event. Exhibiting twice as many artworks as the first edition, the 2nd Bienal was held at two pavilions designed for the newly inaugurated Ibirapuera Park by Oscar Niemeyer (1917-2012): the States Pavilion (presently the Pavilion of Brazilian Cultures) and the Nations Pavilion (now home to the Afro Brasil Museum). The exhibition continued into the following year as part of the celebrations for São Paulo's 400th anniversary.

3rd Bienal de São Paulo (1955)

Having established itself as an important event in international art world, the Bienal's 3rd edition featured the Mexican muralists Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros.

4th Bienal de São Paulo (1957)

In the 4th Bienal, many Brazilian artists contested the selection process and Ciccillo Matarazzo's inordinate influence. This was the first time the Bienal was held at its present home, the Industry Pavilion at Ibirapuera Park. This edition was surrounded by controversy when works by several leading names in the Brazilian art scene, such as Flávio de Carvalho, were turned down by the selection jury. The abstract expressionist Jackson Pollock, who died the year before, was honoured with a special room organized by the American delegation, which marked the height of his international renown.

5th Bienal de São Paulo (1959)

200,000 visitors ensured the success of this exhibition, whose highlights included a selection of thirty works by the impressionist icon, Vincent van Gogh, and a strong showing of Tachism and Informal Art.

6th Bienal de São Paulo (1961)

Ciccillo Matarazzo ceases to be the main patron of the Bienal and the exhibition endured its first financial crisis. The 6th edition is remembered for its museology and the predominance of Neoconcretism, typified by the revolutionary presence of Lygia Clark’s Bichos. Furthermore, part of the selection committee was elected by artists. The Bienal received a delegation from the USSR for the first time in the event’s history.

7th Bienal de São Paulo (1963)

The 7th edition was marked by an excessive number of works selected, which, in turn, created an eclectic scene that was difficult to understand. This was the first time that Fundação Bienal (founded in 1962) organized the exhibition, instead of the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo. The catalog was dedicated to Wanda Svevo, who died the previous year.

8th Bienal de São Paulo (1965)

The Bienal comes under political pressure from the government with the beginning of the military dictatorship in Brazil. At the awards ceremony, artists Maria Bonomi and Sérgio Camargo deliver a motion for the repeal of the preventive arrests of Mário Schenberg, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Florestan Fernandes and Cruz Costa to the President Castelo Branco. Despite the complications, the exhibition is remembered for a special room dedicated to Surrealism and Fantastic art. Marcel Duchamp’s famous ready-made Roue de bicyclette (1913) was shown alongside works by Max Ernst, Marc Chagall, Joan Miró, Jean Arp, Man Ray, Paul Klee, Paul Delvaux, René Magritte and Francis Picabia.

9th Bienal de São Paulo (1967)

The “Pop Art Bienal” opened under a shroud of controversy: even before the exhibition opened, the Federal Police removed two works on the grounds that they were “offensive” to the Brazilian Constitution: Cybèle Varela’s painting O presente was considered “anti-nationalist” – the work was destroyed and the artist almost arrested by the DOPS – and the series by Quissak Jr., Meditação sobre a Bandeira Nacional, which infringed laws that prohibited the free use of the flag. The US delegation presented a sample of Pop Art that included Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Robert Rauschenberg. Many works were damaged and the US room was vandalized a few days into the exhibition. From this show on, the award jury was composed of art critics rather than consultants.

10th Bienal de São Paulo (1969)

Months after Institutional Act n. 5 (AI-5) came into force, effectively annulling personal freedoms, eighty percent of the artists invited to exhibition refused, in protest, to participate. The 10th edition was thus nicknamed the “Boycott Bienal”

11th Bienal de São Paulo (1971)

Controversy surrounded the opening of the Bienal with the boycott by artists, again, and the exile of Mario Pedrosa, who had been a leader for most of the editions in the Bienal's first decade, and director of the 6th and 7th editions. The selection of Brazilian artists was made from a pre-Bienal held the previous year.

12th Bienal de São Paulo (1973)

A giant mouth designed by Vera Figueiredo "swallowed" visitors to 12th Bienal, demonstrating the strength of Neo-concrete derivations. Installations and environments that appealed to all of the senses were presented in the Art and Communication segment. Replacing the Art Technical Committee, the Council for Art and Culture (CAC) developed a new selection framework and denied entry to 90% of the Brazilian works submitted. The Brazilian Representation was made up of 100 artists selected through regional juries (Fortaleza, Salvador, Belo Horizonte, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Curitiba). Kandinsky's works, which were brought by the French Representation, are exhibited for the first time in South America.

São Paulo Art Biennial, Pavilhão Ciccillo Matarazzo, Ibirapuera Park

13th Bienal de São Paulo (1975)

Eager for updating, the so-called "Videomakers Bienal" brought Brazil a precise selection video art produced by renowned artists from all parts of the world, ranging from Andy Warhol to South Korean Nam June Paik, whose installation TV Garden (1974) surprised the Brazilian audience by arranging TV monitors among vases of Palm trees and artificial plants.

14th Bienal de São Paulo (1977)

The first Bienal without Ciccillo was defined by meaningful changes: the appointment of a Council for Art and Culture with freedom to develop the exhibition program – among the new rules is the requirement that National Representations follow the themes proposed by the Bienal for the selection of artists, a model inspired by the Venice Biennale. The CAC defines three chapters for the exhibition: Anthological Exhibitions (replacing the Special Rooms), Great Confrontations and Contemporary Propositions – the latter composed of seven themes: Urban Archaeology, Nature Recuperation, Catastrophic Art, Video Art, Space Poetry, The Wall as a Display for Artworks, Non Codified Art.

15th Bienal de São Paulo (1979)

The "Bienal of the Bienals" was a retrospective of the previous fourteen editions and brought national and international prize-winning works since 1951 back to the pavilion, as well as artists selected by the Brazilian Association of Art Critics (ABCA). On the other hand, it was the first Bienal not to grant any awards, a strategy that would continue on definitively in the following editions.

16th Bienal de São Paulo (1981)

The emergence of the General Curator role would change the course of the Bienal. The critic and former Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art of the University of São Paulo (MAC-USP), Walter Zanini, was the first to fill the position, in an edition which abolished separate spaces for each country and chose to group the works according to "analogy of language" (techniques and themes). This show also marks the end of the boycotts of the Bienal by artists and the beginning of political openness in Brazil.

17th Bienal de São Paulo (1983)

The increasingly common languages in contemporary global art of performance, video, videotext, installation and happening set the tone of the 17th Bienal. Fluxus Street was installed on the ground floor of the pavilion and was one of the most memorable installations. It even included a room with documentation on the group – records of Ben Vautier sleeping, Dick Higgins playing the piano, and Wolf Vostell during an action in New York.

18th Bienal de São Paulo (1985)

This edition showed the rising trend of expressionism in contemporary painting and featured an unusual expography that set the debate through the course of the entire 18th Bienal. The curator, Sheila Leirner, arranged most of the works in three 100-meter long halls, installing paintings side by side – a display called the Great Canvas.

19th Bienal de São Paulo (1987)

Adopting “Utopia versus Reality” as its theme, the 19th Bienal's highlights were the works by German artist Anselm Kiefer. Marked by a strong presence of installations and sculptures, the third floor of the pavilion received the monumental sculpture, Palette mit Flügel (1985), by Kiefer, and the installation Enquanto flora a borda... (1987), by Tunga, which would slide from the ceiling to the floor in the large central span of the pavilion.

20th Bienal de São Paulo (1989)

The 20th Bienal was conceived by a triumvirate: Carlos von Schmidt, Stella Teixeira de Barros, and João Cândido Galvão. Interrupting the propositions of past editions, the team resumed the granting of awards and the arrangement of national representations in separate rooms. The Brazilian Representation was considered to be one of the most solid in a long time.

21st Bienal de São Paulo (1991)

Only for this edition did the Bienal resume the system of open registration for artists from all over the world. Heading the curatorship, João Cândido Galvão repeated his role in the previous edition as curator of the dance, music and theater sections, and enjoyed success by presenting two unforgettable performances: Suz/O/Suz, by the Catalan group Fura dels Baus, and O Trilogie Antica: Medeea, Troienele, Electra, by Henrik Ibsen, narrated in Latin and Greek by the National Theater Company of Bucharest.

22nd Bienal de São Paulo (1994)

The Bienal changes its calendar and starts taking place in even-numbered years. The historical segment takes on a major importance in this edition, whose theme, “Rupture as Support,” made it possible to explore platforms and poetics observed in the works of Hélio Oiticica, Lygia Clark and Mira Schendel.

23rd Bienal de São Paulo (1996)

A new record in the number of national representations with 75 countries subscribing to the theme proposed by Nelson Aguilar: “The Dematerialization of Art at the End of the Millennium.” On this occasion, a Historical Nucleus with a broad diversity of countries brought together over 200 prints by Francisco de Goya, illustrated the posthumous work of Jean-Michael Basquiat, and presented 37 paintings by Edvard Munch.

24th Bienal de São Paulo (1998)

Known as one of the best edition ever produced, the "Anthropophagy Bienal" was led by Paulo Herkenhoff as general curator and Adriano Pedrosa as associate curator. The concept, extracted from the roots of Brazilian culture, permeated the work of all 76 curators involved in the exhibition, as well as was the result of powerful solo shows dedicated to each of the 53 National Representations. The curators worked with the idea of contamination and put contemporary Brazilian works in dialogue with works in the Historical Nucleus.

25th Bienal de São Paulo (2002)

Centered on the theme “Metropolitan Iconographies”, the 25th Bienal has become famous for the strong presence of Brazilian artists off the São Paulo/Rio de Janeiro axis. The appointment of the first foreign curator, Alfons Hug, from Germany, excited controversy. However, the show received excellent acclaim and beat attendance records, at 668,428 visitors.

26th Bienal de São Paulo (2004)

This was the first year of the free admission policy, which would be applied to all subsequent editions. With the theme of “Free Territory,” the 26th Bienal, introduced a new generation into the art scene, such as Cabelo, Chelpa Ferro and Laura Vinci, among others. Once again the exhibition demonstrated its highly contemporary character by presenting works mostly produced between 2002 and 2004. At least one third of the works in the show were site-specific projects, developed specifically for the Bienal Pavilion.

27th Bienal de São Paulo (2006)

The theme “How to Live Together” – the title of a set of seminars delivered by Roland Barthes in the 1970s – served curator Lisette Lagnado as a guide. The edition was marked by the extinction of National Representations – the selection of artists was up to the determination of the curators of the Bienals – and by the claim that art is a transnational language. Constituting a fundamental innovation for the exhibition, the curatorial projects would be chosen from then on through a selection process conducted by an international committee of critics and curators.

28th Bienal de São Paulo (2008)

Rethinking the purpose and direction of the exhibition, the 28th Bienal – “In Living Contact” carried out a radical proposal by keeping the second floor of the pavilion completely empty, as an Open Plan – a metaphor for the conceptual crisis experienced by traditional biennial systems faced by the institutions that organize them. The noteworthy episode of that edition was the graffiti on the pavilion's guardrails, which led to a discussion in the art milieu about urban art.

29th Bienal de São Paulo (2010)

Driven by a new impetus promoted by a new Board of Directors committed to the renewal of the institution, the Bienal inaugurated its 29th edition with a permanent educational project and a broad parallel program. Favoring politically oriented works, the curatorship of Agnaldo Farias and Moacir dos Anjos held nearly 400 activities in the six conceptual spaces entitled Terreiros, and made its theme a verse by Jorge de Lima: “There is always a cup of sea to sail in”. Bandeira branca (2010), by Nuno Ramos, stirred controversy due to its live vultures flying in the central span of the pavilion accompanied by a montage of sounds from the national popular tradition.

30th Bienal de São Paulo (2012)

Titled “The Imminence of Poetics”, this edition of the Bienal adopted the constellation as a metaphor and established discursive interconnections between past and present; center and periphery; object and language. With a large number of works by each artist, the exhibition focused on Latin American artists and paid tribute to Arthur Bispo do Rosário and Waldemar Cordeiro. The project Mobile Radio set up a radio station on the mezzanine floor of the pavilion that had broadcasts throughout the entire period of the exhibition.

31st Bienal de São Paulo (2014)

The works of this edition – entitled “How to (…) things that don’t exist” – were designed within the concept of "project," many carried out in collaboration between two or more individuals – artists and professionals from other disciplines, such as teachers, sociologists, architects or writers. Daring, the exhibition established itself as being deeply connected with some central themes of contemporary life: identity, sexuality and transcendence.

32nd Bienal de São Paulo (2016)

The 32nd Bienal – “Live Uncertainty” set itself the aim of observing notions of uncertainty and strategies offered by contemporary art to embrace or inhabit it. Established artists like Öyvind Fahlström, Sonia Andrade, Lourdes Castro and Víctor Grippo were seen alongside young artists, most of whom were women. Also noteworthy is the fact that this edition was the one that presented the highest number of commissioned artworks in the history of the exhibition. The curators traveled to four cities to bring forth Study Days (Accra, in Ghana, Lamas, in Peru, Santiago, in Chile, and Cuiabá, in Brazil), and also held a last meeting in São Paulo. Conceived as an artwork by Jorge Menna Barreto, the exhibition's restaurant unfolds notions regarding the relationships between human eating habits and the environment, landscape, climate and life on Earth.

33rd Bienal de São Paulo (2018)

The 33rd Bienal – “Affective Affinities” was held from September 7 to December 9.

See also

References

  1. Lind, Maria (October 2009). "Active Cultures: Maria Lind on the Curatorial". Artforum. Retrieved 30 August 2015 via Questia Online Library.
  2. Fundação Bienal de São Paulo Biennial Foundation, Athens.
  3. Larry Rohter (July 11, 2001), Undeterred by Crises, São Paulo Biennial Celebrates at 50 New York Times.
  4. Larry Rohter (May 27, 2002), A Tilt Toward the Third World at the São Paulo Biennial New York Times.
  • Bienal de São Paulo homepage Website
  • Bienal Brasileira de Artes Plásticas Website
  • Artkrush.com - feature on São Paulo Biennial, November 2006

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