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Reading time 9 min

Seduction experience

Renato Janine Ribeiro

A life acquires meaning largely thanks to the revelations it is made up of. Birth is probably the first epiphany we have – at least until we know more about intrauterine life, which must be quite rich. Being born is a difficult experience, most certainly a painful one, especially because we lose a warm, wet, protected environment and enter a wide world, which will take long to be perceived as a good one. Often this world will never even be a good one, it won’t even make sense, we will often never find its rhythm.  But then, after all this, we keep on having revelations.  One of the most celebrated advertisement pieces in our culture – considering that Brazil has top-notch admen – is the one that features a girl’s first brassiere, the one “she will never forget”: The boy’s face lights up, between fascination and shock, as he sees a woman wearing nothing but a bra for the first time. A revelation of the sexual nature of female beauty, which might or might not be precocious.  Eroticism appears disrupting, surprising, dazzling, and, as everything that dazzles and overshadows us, it forever changes the way we look at things.    

 

Every big revelation is like that.  It removes the veil that covers the world, it reveals, thus showing the truth, showing what is behind the veil, that which was believed to be hidden.   Its first effect is to catch the eyes’ attention with such power that nothing else is left.  For a few moments, which might seem too long, the sight is so overwhelmed that objects disappear, and what actually takes their place? Light?  New objects? The chance of living life differently?

 

I live in a city that owes its name for having been founded in the day we celebrate a man going blind.  Its patron saint, Saul of Tarsus lost his sight during a visit to Damascus.  Before that, we relentlessly persecuted Christians.  Suddenly, in the middle of a road, far from everything that resembled an urban space, which protects and safeguards, he is blinded by a light and a voice interrogates him.  This is a well-known episode and I will not tell it again.  The revelation of Christ to his persecutor obfuscates Saul. He recovers and is converted.  Every major revelation is only valuable when it results in a conversion.  Nothing will be as it was before. The persecutor becomes a preacher. Saul becomes Paul. He loses the heathen and opens up to the pagan.  Saint Paul no longer has anything to do with Tarsus.  He leaves the local behind and becomes global.  He was probably the first greatest globalizer of religion.  Christianity – which could have been nothing but a sect of Judaism, or even merely a change in Judaism – leaves the Holy Land and goes to the world.   It no longer will be a religion of a single people, but rather a religion that touches the whole of mankind.  So that was the most celebrated conversion of all, followed by the most celebrated epiphany of all.

 

Inhotim is a revelation.  I don´t know anyone who has visited the art center and hasn’t left – the word they usually use is one of these – mesmerized, impressed.  I had the privilege to be introduced to Inhotim by Cláudio de Moura Castro. He brought a catalog whose every image caused these impressions – strong marks that get stuck to your soul and, many times, to your body, inerasable images.  They stay. That is how I was seduced by images, before even visiting the place that especially celebrates images, for this is what art is: images.  I mentioned I was “seduced”, and this is the correct word to use – for being seduced means to be deviated from the right path.  But what is correct when it comes to art, to creation?  Generally, that which is less good is correct.  That which will generate a future generally begins because it is wrong.  The artworks at Inhotim, whether those which fit the usual concept of bi-dimensional image or those which open more dimensions, including the sound dimension, disrupt commonsense, with orthodoxy, that is, with an opinion said to be the correct one.  They deviate and deviate those who face them.  This invitation to the crooked, to the different, is one of the most important contributions contemporary art offers to those who experience it (and that is precisely why there are no spectators at Inhotim, who would keep a somehow quiet distance from objects, a distance between the subject and the object, which does not modify the subject). Inhotim is not made for the Bourbons, who recovered power in France in 1814, after having been exiled for a quarter of a century and who “neither had forgotten nor learned anything”.  It is a life experience with which you learn a lot and, undoubtedly, one which makes you forget a lot as well – for there might not be learning without oblivion, which Nietzsche believed to be extremely active, extremely needed for creation. This is the culture which is worthwhile:  That which modifies those who experience it.

 

 I remember Freud, in an article written in 1916, in which he deplored the Great War that was in progress, nostalgically recalling the day immediately preceding that period, when the educated man would travel to Europe as if each country, each culture, were a different room in a great museum.  Nothing better defines the concept of what Inhotim is.  The Contemporary Art Center is not a museum whose sole purpose is for people to enjoyably appreciate diverse objects that not question them. It is a series of questions, almost a questionnaire for each one of us, challenging us, offering pleasure – no doubt – but also raising one doubt after another.  And, thus, we have revelations that are different from those which have inspired the apostle, for they don´t bring certainties, they don´t offer a new faith, an orthodoxy that supplants previous ones, instead, they raise questions, issues.  It is no coincidence that Inhotim changes the minds of those who got used to just enjoy artworks, removing them from possibly blasé world of the connoisseur, while it fascinates young people, those whose looks are virgin.

 

I end with a truthful anecdote. Once, the two greatest French philosophers of the second half of the 20th century met. It was around 1970. Foucault said to Deleuze,  “One day, the century will be Deleuzianized”.  He meant that the traditional thinking, referring to Aristotle, Descartes and Kant, would not suffice for what was starting to happen among the younger minds.  Well, that is what we have needed at least since the time immediately after May 1968. The world changes rapidly and we are barely able to understand, much less theorize, what is appears right before our eyes.  Inhotim is part of this new world.  We may lack theories about it, but we see it.  And that is certainly why youngsters find so much pleasure here. 

 

 

*Renato Janine Ribeiro is a professor of Ethics and Political Philosophy at Universidade de São Paula and a member of the Advisory Council at Inhotim. He has also taken part in the Friends of Inhotim Program since 2011.

Reading time 6 min

Tips to visit Inhotim

Redação Inhotim

How do I get there? Is it possible to visit the whole Park in one single day? Where can I stay near there? How much is the ticket? Do they have parking facilities? I’m going straight from the airport, where I can store my luggage? Can I take a guided tour?

 

If Inhotim is part of your wish list to 2014, at some point you will come across some of these questions. Enjoy the tips and start planning your visit.

 

 

The first step is to know how to get there.

 

Inhotim is located in Brumadinho (MG), about 60 km from Belo Horizonte. To calculate the best route for your trip, just click here (http://www.inhotim.org.br/visite/como-chegar). If you are in Belo Horizonte, on average, it will take you 90 minutes to drive to Inhotim. The parking lot at the park is free of charge. However, if you fly in, you can rent a car or take a taxi. It takes about  2 hours from Confins airport to the park or one and a half hour from Pampulha airport. The good news is that Inhotim has lockers for your handbags and luggage. You can also get there by bus. Saritur bus company has a line that goes from the Belo Horizonte bus station, located downtown, straight to the park, Tuesdays through Sundays . Check out  the timetables and bus fares here.

 

Where to stay.

 

Okay, now that you already know how to get there, you need to decide if you are going to stay in Brumadinho or in Belo Horizonte. Inhotim has 110 hectares of visitation area, which means you won’t be able to visit the entire park in just one day. If you are in Belo Horizonte and have a day off, you will certainly enjoy the visit. But if Inhotim is your main destination, a three-day visit is your best option. This way, you can walk, reflect and enjoy the environment with no need to hurry. Check out the lodging options here. 

 

And now what?

 

Purchased airline tickets, hotel reservation, it’s time to plan your visit to the park. Since Inhotim is a place unlike any other you’ve ever visited, there are some tips that can make your visit there even better. Besides being a Contemporary Art Center, Inhotim is also a Botanical Garden. Art galleries are surrounded by palm trees, flowers, lakes and plenty of wooden benches. Yes, art in the middle of nature. That’s why walking is an important part of the visit. To save some time, a good tip is to buy your ticket in advance. And if necessary, you can also rent internal transportation on our electric carts. Click here to purchase your ticket.

 

Another great tip is to navigate through the park before going there. The interactive map helps you decide routes, learn about the galleries and even get better acquainted with some of the artworks. Speaking of delving into the park, here  you can learn about the guided visits that happen at Inhotim. Food service points are strategically located. Check out each one of them. Before you hit the road, it’s worth reading the visitation rules, so that everything will run as planned.

 

If you made it this far, you are very close to accomplishing your goal. Inhotim is an unforgettable place. Enjoy!

Reading time 6 min

My day at Inhotim

Redação Inhotim

I was really excited when I heard I was coming to Inhotim.  I didn´t really know what it was, but Vitor told me it was super cool and there was lots of space to play.  Vitor came here once.   Artur and I didn´t.  Well, right after we got to the parking lot and walked to the park, I was really excited with that huge pathway, covered with trees.  When the guys put the visitor sticker on our shirts, we heard there were some special activities for kids during the day.  When we got there, they told us there would be a treasure hunt.  They divided the kids into groups.  The smaller kids went somewhere to play and we, the big kids, got together to start the treasure hunt.

 

There were two teams. Each team had to find all the clues and discover the surprise at the end.  The assistants helped us solve the riddles.  We started running to find the clues really fast.  There were five clues.  They had notes that told us how to find the treasure.  Each clue told us to go north, northeast, northwest… all directions.  I found three out of five all on my own.  I was really smart. The clues were hidden in the middle of the vegetation, tied to the plants.  All you had to do was to slide your hand along and look real good and you could find it.  Some clues made us really tired, because we had to run and really look for them.  After we found everything, we went to get the treasure, seeds of the Tamboril tree. This big tree behind us.  

 

After all this, we went to visit the whole park.  I didn’t really know what I was going to find.  When I arrived there, I thought I was going to see art, animals, and lots of trees I’d never seen before.  Artur really just wanted to go see Saci1, and his story.  Someone told him he was going to see Saci at the park.  Ow, Vitor also said there was a tree here that moves every month.  I don´t really believe that.  If the tree started moving around, I’d be really freaked out.  But one thing we did a lot was walking.  We walked, and walked, and walked… my leg even hurt at the end. 

 

Meu dia no Inhotim - Colônia de férias Artur (6), Vitor (10) e Eduardo (10) enjoyed their day of visit at Inhotim Photo: Rossana Magri

 

 

The Cosmococa was the thing I liked the most.  We entered there and there were five rooms:  one with balloons, another one with foam, another one with a pool, another with hammocks and another one with movies.  We even went for a swim in the pool.  Artur and I swam in our shorts.  Vitor was here before and he knew about the pool, so he brought his swimming suit.  Also, we strolled around lots of cool places and saw lots of different flowers, like cactus and others.  We went to a room where the floor is covered in broken glass. We went to another room that was really dark. We saw a shock ball too.  I was afraid the water was going to fall on me and I’d get shocked!  

 

But there was something I thought was really weird:  the water in the lakes is green! What do they do to make it look like that?  Another thing: that blue room, with tiles, with a wall painted with human organs inside. How did they do that? What about the shallow pool in this building’s entrance, are we allowed to enter or not?  Another different thing I saw was the sculpture of a man mended to another man.  I thought that was pretty crazy and we even took pictures trying to copy them.  

 

At the end, we even saw Saci’s house, but we couldn’t see him like Artur wanted to.  We didn’t have the stuff we needed to make him appear, and the assistants were not there at the time to help us.  But I thought Inhotim was really beautiful.  The art, the environment, everything was made with a lot of care, wasn’t it?   When I first got here, I thought it was kind of weird, because I’d never been to a place that big.  But now I know how it is and I want to come back.   I couldn’t see everything yet, like, for example, a room that is all red.  I really enjoyed it!

 

 

Statement given by Eduardo, age 10, about his day of visit to Inhotim.

 

 

 

1 Saci is a Brazilian´s folklore character. He is a one-legged youngster  who smokes a pipe and wears a magical red cap that enables him to disappear and reappear wherever he wishes.

 

 

Reading time 7 min

When art inspires art

Redação Inhotim

A visit to Inhotim translated into music. That’s what went on: in late 2012, singer-songwriter from São Paulo Marcelo Jeneci spent a few days in Brumadinho/MG to visit the Institute. He loved it. “I found it unbelievable that Brazil has such a rich place, so well structured, with a clear proposal and with so much beauty. It invites you to see the universe in a different way”, he says. The experience paid off when it comes to his compositions. His new album, “De Graça“, released in October 2013, features the song  “Pra Gente se Desprender“, inspired by the work Forty Part Motet, 2001, by Canadian artist Janet Cardiff, shown in one of the rooms of Galeria Praça, at Inhotim. Check out our conversation with Marcelo, part of a new group of artists that has brought new color to the music scene.

 

 

Blog do Inhotim – Marcelo, how did the story with Janet Cardiff’s work go on ?

Marcelo Jeneci – I went to Brumadinho and stayed five days in the city to visit Inhotim. I found  Janet Cardiff’s work with the coral amazing [referring to Forty Part Motet, 2001]. Listening to that in 360 degrees as we hear the sounds of everyday life… This liturgical and Baroque music relates to a part of my life, my childhood. It brought back a primitive affective memory to me, when I used to go to church. When I was there I thought, “Wow, I have to bring a liturgical choir to convey the emotion I’m feeling here for my next album.”

 

 

BI – So that is how “Pra Gente se Desprender” came about?

MJ – Exactly. I created the instrumental theme at the end of the song thinking about the feeling I had when I visited the installation at Inhotim. I wanted to make people feel what I felt there. This experience had an actual interference in the song. Interestingly, since the reviews of “De Graça” began to be published, this song is the one most often mentioned as a favorite! It was received differently when compared to the other songs, and it always gets some special attention in texts about the disc.

 

 

BI – Was that your first visit to the park?

MJ – No, I had played with Arnaldo Antunes there once. I think all Brazilians should visit this place, it is marvelous, a unique experience that influences people. Everyone talks a lot about it, but since Brazil so huge, in some places sometimes people still haven’t heard of it. Wherever I go, I tell everyone they should visit it.

 

 

BI – Amid such diversified production we see today, how do you perceive yourself as an artist?

MJ – I think art is an affirmation of life. As an artist, I feel that an exchange happens in my day to day life. It is as if the circumstantialities of life, the way I was raised and how music is presented to me have trained me to be able to synthesize and share some of my views, feelings about the world, sorrows and joys. It’s like the work of someone who writes a letter: my feeling is that I give a response about some issues back to people. We are living a very rich moment in art, music and in the history of mankind.

 

 


BI ­– You once said when you make music your intention is to improve the people’s lives right from the first chord. How do you see this relationship between art and life?

MJ – I try to spread a positive message, a positive outlook, encouraging the idea that a dream always gives place to another dream. I emphasize the bright side of things, the one that is for free,  for everyone. Sometimes, when we face  the cruelty of the nature of life, we feel very distant from this other point of view. This characteristic is present in the structure of my work and comes from my family, the combination of my parents, a man from northeastern Brazil and a woman from São Paulo, living in the outskirts of São Paulo. Both of them always have a smile on their faces, they see the beauty in life. That’s how I was brought up, aware of this positivity and there are moments this attitude is quite suitable. One of the most interesting things in life is to add: the things we talk about, learn, teach… friendship, man, woman, sex, what is intrinsic to our instincts. The relationship between human beings is very important and it is essential to talk about it.

 

 

BI – How you feel your new album, “The Graça“, is being received?

MJ – I feel that the launch is starting to happen. Things haven’t speeded up, but I have received very positive feedback. I perceive a difference from the first to the second album. This has a more radical, acid proposal, which was not there before. There is more pain, more crying out, more ”beating up”, and this has been well received, even by those who felt closer to the sound of the previous album. Still, there are songs that touch the heart. For me, the difference is that, in this work, I feel very clearly I’ve had an encounter with myself, and, then,  the opinion of others doesn’t really matter. It was  cathartic, a trance that has healed me, made ??me feel horribly well [laughter]. Because of all that, any frustration that might come will not be as heavy. This encounter with myself moves me.

 

 

Reading time 6 min

Letter to Amilcar de Castro

Rodrigo Moura

Amilcar,

 

I finally got to visit your exhibit at Praça da Liberdade.  As Affonso Ávila must have told you, that place has become a procession of cultural centers, a corridor or something of the kind.  In the cultural center that belongs to a bank, they have now put together an exhibit with your work.  I have to confess that it took me a while to find all the rooms, but when I found my way in the galleries, I once again heard your voice on the back of my mind, that sound of thunder that showed me the way almost two decades ago.  Maybe you wouldn’t be as disturbed by the colorful walls as I was – after all, you’ve always said those colors of yours were not actual colors in the pictorial sense, but rather graphic chromatic information.  You might have been able to explain to me why the exhibit doesn´t have any historical works, as if you didn’t need them even 10 years after your passing.  And why the works displayed represent a few of your collections, all in Minas, and why not a single museum was asked to make one of your sculptures available – I can think at least of Pampulha, that place to which to have donated such beautiful and important pieces of your work, even though the Museum of Modern Art in Rio, MAM, has also gotten an equal share of your work.   You might have been able to answer me in a slightly serious, yet ironic, way, that if it hadn’t been for this partiality, it would have been for another one.  You might have said that everything in the world is relative. I will never forget the time we met in Vitória, where I went especially to see your exhibit, a stunning exhibit, and you asked me, “did you come here only for this?”.  Did you mean that? I’ll never know.

 

Walking around those rooms today has brought me once again closer to you. What else can one ask of an exhibit?  I’m aware that just before we lost you, you had had some of the most prolific years of your work, the most genius years, yet, I doubt it would have been any different in the previous decades.  Based on this exhibit, one could hardly tell.  But, what the heck, you hated the idea of change.  I recall the many times I called you to comment on one of your exhibits, or a new artwork, and the fear with which you always tried to dissuade me from the idea that something could have changed.  Wood? It is the same as Cor-ten.  Glass? You already did it in the 1950s? You did it in New York. Color? Didn’t I already know it? In this exhibit, almost everything was from the late 90s. I once again saw the most beautiful woods (nearly 100) and expressive cut-by-cut and folded sets, especially in those in small scale, which is what their space allows them to do.  In one of the rooms, the larger sculptures do so much for our bodies, and I had almost forgotten, so much I saw their photographs.  Your work as an engraver (which you used to say was just another way of drawing) was treated with rare earnestness. It was a pleasure to see that.  But, then, maybe everything is life is nothing but just another way of drawing.  Or, for me, of writing.  And I still want to see you being scrutinized, dated, synthetizing Max Ball before everyone else, back in 1953, essential, vital, central in the recipe for neoconcretism, as big as those who considered you a peer of their own magnitude.  This time will come and I’ll keep on waiting, until maybe one day I do it myself.  It seems to me that the difference between scale and size is one of your most important lessons – how monumental those small sculptures are, full of imagination, and what a sense of duration they bear, which is so liberating when it comes to seductively phony dogmas of nearly unintelligible  art.

 

As I went down the stairs in the old building, Belo Horizonte, dressed up as São Paulo, wasn’t immune to you, and the metalworks, stuccos and stained glass windows celebrated your presence and took pride in your company.  Outside, in the exit, the world was not immune to you.  And every straight angle, every time glass met with concrete, each modernist deviation, Minas Caixa and Ipsemg buildings, Rua Goiás, Carol stationary, existed in the same everlasting way your work exists.  After you, we will never be indifferent to form.

 

During one of our last conversations, you told me you were happy with your last exhibit at Pinacoteca.  Writing to the paper, I quoted you, “I don’t think it is bad, it is a pleasure for me to do it.  I like the way they arranged things”.  As I mentioned back then, “it looks simple”.  It still isn´t.

 

Grateful affection from just another one of your students,

 

Rodrigo

 

Belo Horizonte, December 14, 2013.