In this edition of arte!brasileiros, we present in Brazil, in Portuguese, two chapters of a text by the Spanish curator and art critic Agustin Pérez Rubio, former director of MALBA (Argentina) and co-curator of the 11th Berlin Biennale, held in 2020. We made this choice based on the exceptional work that he and the artist Sandra Gamarra carried out as representatives of the Spanish Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale, Foreigners everywhere, which ends on November 24th of this year.

The work of Peruvian Gamarra, who lives in Spain, powerfully reflects the debate on colonization and its role in America, where thousands of indigenous people, born here, and Afro-descendants, brought under slavery regime from Africa, Portugal and other colonies, were killed throughout the centuries of European presence.

This editorial takes its title from one of the chapters in Ariella Aïsha Azoulay's book, Potential History, which Fabio Cypriano reviews, and in which she proposes, among other things, the importance of “unlearning the original violence of imperialism”. Rethinking the perspective, vocabularies and concepts used to understand what the revolutions, like the American and the French, responsible for an era, in comparison, for example, with what was achieved with the revolution Haitian anti-imperialist.

Everything that is said today about indigenous peoples, structural racism and cultural economic domination will be little to understand the difficulty of charting a new path for our countries, which lack even a bourgeois revolution, and where economic and social inequality has affected races, cultures and religions.

Cypriano also reviews the 38th Panorama of MAM, currently housed at MAC USP due to renovations in Ibirapuera Park. The exhibition reflects the excellent work of young curators and artists, who bring the voice of the streets to museums.

It is no coincidence that for more than ten years the arte!brasileiros chose an interdisciplinary aesthetic and didactic approach to talk about art. It is impossible to talk about art without being up to date with current events. Art did not and will not escape the slave traditions, nor their denunciation. Art, as I sometimes say, it's a pretext.

Biennials, exhibitions and symposia, which emerged at the beginning of the 20th century, are increasingly seeking new formats to house cultural movements that can account for new counter-hegemonic narratives on the one hand, as well as for social demonstrations in constant movement.

Maria Hirszman visited and compiled four exhibitions on display, which propose, from different perspectives, to fill in the gaps in history regarding the importance of the African presence in Brazil.

Eduardo Simões was present at the seminar Essays for the Museum of Origins: politics of memory, organized by the Tomie Ohtake Institute, and writes about the conference Museo del Barro and Museu das Origens: institutional critique and memory politics in Latin America, with Ana Roman, Izabela Pucu, Lia Colombino and Paulo Miyada, and in which Gleyce Kelly Heitor and José Eduardo Ferreira Santos also participated as debaters.

A very encouraging experience in this second semester was the Sertão Negro Ateliê e Escola de Artes, an initiative conceived by the artist Dalton Paula and the researcher Ceiça Ferreira, in Goiânia, in 2021. Ceiça, Luciara Ribeiro and Vitória Soares, members of the artistic and cultural space, write about the proposals of the place, which involve “dialogues between the visual arts, sertões and the cerrado based on traditional knowledge of Afro-Brazilian and African origins”.

Through research and careful observation, we seek to contribute to reflection and to disseminate the daily life of art and culture – national and international – always concerned with considering its time and its surroundings. Those of us who value civilization are always looking for new equations of coexistence and, fundamentally, new drifts and possibilities for intervention. Enjoy your reading!


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