Ricardo Valentim: Galeria Pedro Cera.
Amado, Miguel
Since the beginning of his career, at the start of this decade, New
York-based Portuguese artist Ricardo Valentim has explored
representations of the "other." A former student of
anthropology, Valentim examines the artifacts through which collective
identity manifests itself, calling attention to their symbolic
character. For example, Pocket Watch, 2006--which consists of the title
object displayed against a piece of wood--alludes to a story well known
among anthropologists: A native of the Amazon, given a pocket watch as a
gift by an anthropologist, hung it on the wall of his hut; when the
anthropologist asked why, he responded that this was what the
anthropologist had done with the bow and arrow the Indian had given him.
In recent years, Valentim has created photographs, films, and sculptures
and has organized lectures, screenings, and other events through which
he presents the economy of symbols that define contemporary visuality.
For instance, in this recent exhibition, he showed a selection of
Jacques Cousteau's films from the series "The Undersea
World," along with the artist's own film, O outro lado do uso
(The Other Side of Use), 2005, which captures customers leaving a New
York City Starbucks coffee shop holding paper cups.
One of Valentim's best-known projects is Film Festival,
2006-2007, which was not included in this show. It's a screening of
educational films commissioned by the United Nations and the US
Department of Education, among other agencies, for presentation in
public schools. Valentim bought the reels on eBay, documentaries about
indigenous African peoples, historical figures, and natural phenomena
that exemplify Western visions of the world from the postwar period
until the '80s, demonstrating how the ideological apparatus of the
state builds a biased image of reality. The twelve color photographs in
"Start Series," 2007, on display at Galeria Pedro Cera, show
the leaders from those films--the blank segments used to thread the film
into the reel, which often have titles or other information written on
them--cut, aligned, scanned, and blown up to a large scale. The sequence
of film titles and the years they were made--which in turn provide the
titles for each of the works, such as Start Series (Five Presidents on
the Presidency, 1973; Joseph Stalin--Biography, n/d; Portraits of Power:
De Gaulle--Force of Character, 1978; Focus on the United Nations: A
Successor for U Thant), 1966--thus generates a sort of new, fictional
screening program, metaphorically multiplying the original Film
Festival.
One ongoing project that Valentim began for this exhibition is
Models of Democracy, 2008-. In the gallery stand five out of the thirty
sculptures that make up this group so far: small rectangular blocks of
wood, roughly painted black or white, two with an x drawn on them, lean
against the wall. To the artist, these pieces constitute the setting for
future public debates about democracy. While a conference did take place
as part of the exhibition, it was a different one: In Growth and
Culture, 2008, a doctoral student in anthropology introduced the
audience to the theoretical legacy of Margaret Mead and Frances Cooke
Macgregor, authors of the study by the same name dedicated to childhood
in Bali. Afterward, the artist showed a series of slides that replicated
the visual layout of the pages of Mead and Macgregor's book;
captions to the slides were included in a handout distributed to the
audience--for example, "Knowledge--Kassel" and
"Light--Cologne and Lisbon." Inspired by an ethnographic perspective, Valentim investigates the material culture of our time,
showing how personal experience is affected by the collective
imagination.
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Translated from Portuguese by Clifford E. Landers.