De 3/3/2021 a 15/10/2021
Of Carbon and Ammonia
An exhibiition inspired by the Poem "Psychology of a Loser" by Brazilian poet Augusto dos Anjos
curated by Eduardo Besen
03/23/2021 - 05/21/2021
Gravura Brasileira Art Gallery
Monday / Friday - 14 / 18h
From the origin of life to science and technology
From land and nature to creation and the "big bang"
From gesture to line
From matter to the ethereal
From inheritance to the passage of time
From symbolism to modernism
From the existential to the symbolic
Contemporary as transition and fluidity
From the existential bewilderment
Between existentialism and science and between the atom and the cosmos, Augusto dos Anjos wrote a violent and visceral poetry crossed by cosmic anguish and the memory of death. Man is finite and decomposes. Human existence is subject to biology and the decay of being. The grandiloquent style of the writing expresses this struggle between excess and agony.
This existential pain is connected with our time of pandemic and authoritarianism with no possibility of escape or exit. The end of existence: A rotting aesthetic.
Psychology of a loser
"I, son of carbon and ammonia,
Monster of darkness and shining,
I have suffered, since the epigenesis of childhood,
The bad influence of the signs of the zodiac.
Deeply hypochondriac,
This environment causes me disgust ...
A craving rises to my mouth analogous to craving
That escapes the mouth of a cardiac.
The worm - this worker from the ruins -
May the rotten blood of carnage
Eats, and life in general declares war,
Come look at my eyes to gnaw them,
And just leave my hair,
In the inorganic coldness of the earth! "
Augusto dos Anjos (1884-1914)
Artists
Adriana Moreno
Ana Kesselring
André Yassuda
Antonio Carvalho
Atelier Piratininga
Biba Rigo
Ernesto Bonato
Francisco Maringelli
Iberê Camargo
Jacqueline Aronis
Julia Goeldi
Lygia Eluf
Marco Buti
Norma Mobilon
Oswaldo Goeldi
Otávio Araújo
Paulo Camillo Penna
Regina Carmona
Ulysses Boscolo
Rua Ásia, 219, Cerqueira César, São Paulo, SP - CEP 05413-030 - Tel. 55 11 3624.0301
Weekdays: 12 am to 6 pm