Laura Lima
Ninho BNH, 2021
palha, madeira e fio encerado
[straw, wood and waxed string]
[straw, wood and waxed string]
200 x 180 x 100 cm
[78 3/4 x 70 7/8 x 39 3/8 in]
[78 3/4 x 70 7/8 x 39 3/8 in]
Copyright O Artista
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Ninhos são casas para passarinhos habitarem, construídas com chapéus de palha, para abrigar os animais e palitos de madeira, para servirem de poleiros e varandas. Seguindo sua pesquisa sobre obras...
Ninhos são casas para passarinhos habitarem, construídas com chapéus de palha, para abrigar os animais e palitos de madeira, para servirem de poleiros e varandas. Seguindo sua pesquisa sobre obras com seres vivos, presentes, sugeridos ou à espera de sua visita, os Ninhos recentemente desenvolvidos, vêm inicialmente da experiência da obra Fuga de 2008, realizada na A Gentil Carioca no Rio de janeiro, quando a artista colocou cerca de 50 passarinhos pequenos para co-habitarem o espaço da galeria e depois, no Japão, com cerca de 100 passarinhos - ocupando quatro andares de um pequeno prédio na cidade de Toyohashi, região de Nagoya. Diferentes habitações são construídas pela artista. Ninho BNH, presente nesta exposição, refere-se a sigla usada nos anos 70, para Banco Nacional de Habitação, projeto criado depois da ditadura e extinto vinte anos depois. A repetição de formas simula um conjunto habitacional de pássaros em tempos atuais.
Nests are houses for birds to inhabit, built with straw hats to shelter the animals and wooden sticks to serve as perches and balconies. Following the artist research on works with living beings, present, suggested or waiting for its visit, the newly developed Ninhos, initially come from the experience of Fuga from 2008, carried out at A Gentil Carioca in Rio de Janeiro, when Lima placed around 50 small birds to co-inhabit the gallery space and later, in Japan, with around 100 birds - occupying four floors of a small building in the city of Toyohashi, Nagoya region. Different houses are built by the artist. Ninho BNH, present in this exhibition, refers to the acronym used in the 70s for Banco Nacional de Habitação, a project created after the Brazilian dictatorship and extinct twenty years later. The repetition of shapes simulates a housing complex of birds in modern times.
Nests are houses for birds to inhabit, built with straw hats to shelter the animals and wooden sticks to serve as perches and balconies. Following the artist research on works with living beings, present, suggested or waiting for its visit, the newly developed Ninhos, initially come from the experience of Fuga from 2008, carried out at A Gentil Carioca in Rio de Janeiro, when Lima placed around 50 small birds to co-inhabit the gallery space and later, in Japan, with around 100 birds - occupying four floors of a small building in the city of Toyohashi, Nagoya region. Different houses are built by the artist. Ninho BNH, present in this exhibition, refers to the acronym used in the 70s for Banco Nacional de Habitação, a project created after the Brazilian dictatorship and extinct twenty years later. The repetition of shapes simulates a housing complex of birds in modern times.