curators of the exhibition “Thomaz Farkas - Beauty before the eyes”.
Simonetta Persichetti and Rubens Fernandes Junior, curators of the exhibition “Thomaz Farkas - Beauty before the eyes”. Photo by Deivyson Teixeira

By: Simonetta Persichetti and Rubens Fernandes Junior

Getting to know Brazil through the eyes of Thomaz Farkas (1924-2011) is always an enriching experience. A careful look, images that appear to us demonstrating what our eyes alone, or unaccustomed to seeing, would be incapable of perceiving.

What is most fascinating about his photographs is the feeling of fun, as if discovering the invisible were a great game for Farkas, as if he were happy to be able to offer us an unexpected and surprising detail in each image.

His language, which lies on the border between photography considered classical and modern photography, which seeks new forms of visuality, ended up creating his own way of photographing.

This year, in which we celebrate the centenary of Thomaz Farkas, we were invited to be the curators of an exhibition in his honor at MIS-CE.

An exhibition whose main theme was the affection that shines through in all the images that Thomaz collected and produced since he was 18 years old. An attentive, welcoming look that surprises us at every moment.

He used images – photography and cinema – to get to know the depths of Brazil. He began traveling and filming this country, not only to get to know it, but also to introduce it to Brazilians. His dream was for the Southeast to get to know the Northeast; the North, the South; and thus explore this rich territory of ours.

It was from this attentive and politicized, technically and aesthetically differentiated perspective that we organized the exhibition that occupied the three floors of the MIS-CE. The research began in the library. It was in books, novels, theoretical texts, travel guides, and books by his favorite photographers that Thomaz Farkas traveled, dreamed, articulated, and developed his photographic and world imaginary. In addition to his visual universe, he created a literary narrative. References that created his symbolic environment.

The Marly Mariano and Thomaz Farkas Library arrived at MIS-CE recently, but during its cataloguing, dedications, notes, newspaper clippings, photographs, postcards and various notes began to appear. Unlikely objects that acquired an immeasurable emotional value within the books. The discovery of all this material caught the attention of the curators, aroused their curiosity and gave greater clarity and credibility to the artist's education and emotional journey.

The exhibition was divided across the museum's three floors and established a path to unveil Thomaz Farkas's perspective and interests.

In the exhibition room we present images from a collection of photographs by him, based on the different essays he produced during his golden period of creation – a modernist essay, a surrealist essay with friends at the Polytechnic School, an essay on Brasília, before and during its inauguration, an essay on dance, an essay on the Brazilian Northeast. 

In the library, we selected some of the most emblematic books and their associated objects for the display cases, which emerged from obscurity and silence to acquire a luminous ritualization. Trying to understand the possible connections between the book and its objects, added to the dedications, becomes an exercise in creation.

But it is in the immersive room that the wonder happens through the hands, eyes and sensitivity of Wellington Gadelha and his team. There Thomaz Farkas appears mixed in all his images, speeches and sounds. A true and powerful audiovisual tribute.

To see Brazil through the eyes of Thomaz Farkas is to have access to a new possibility of understanding the infinite diversity of perspectives. To know and understand that photography is indeed a form of knowledge and reflection.

The exhibition “Thomaz Farkas – Beauty before the eyes” will remain on display until November 21st. Check out the visiting hours: 
Wednesdays and Thursdays: 10am to 17:30pm
Friday to Sunday: 13pm to 19:30pm
Free admission


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