How to live precariously: Lygia Clark's Caminhando and Tropicalism in 1960s Brazil |
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Authors: | Anna Dezeuze |
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Affiliation: | 1. Ecole Supérieure d'Art et de Design Marseille-Méditerranée, Marseille, Franceanna.dezeuze@esadmm.fr |
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Abstract: | Economic booms and busts, major social upheavals, brutal military dictatorships: precariousness has been a feature of everyday life in Latin America since its independence. But what does it mean to “propose precariousness as a new idea of existence,” as Brazilian artist Lygia Clark did in 1966? This essay focuses on one specific work by Clark, her 1963 Caminhando, in order to explore the ways in which the very status of performative practices can respond to their social and political conditions and thus offer a model for a subjective experience of precariousness in everyday life. A close study of the process that led Clark to create precarious works will be further supplemented by a contextual analysis of debates about precariousness and adversity within the Tropicalist movement that emerged in late-1960s Brazil, which included artist Hélio Oiticica as well as singers and film-makers. |
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Keywords: | Lygia Clark Hélio Oiticica Glauber Rocha Tropicalism precariousness Brazilian art performance |
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