Joao Paulo Feliciano: centro de artes visuais.
Amado, Miguel
Since the early 1990s, Joao Paulo Feliciano has exemplified the
link between music and art in Portugal, a connection that in this
country has seldom gone beyond marginal experimentalism. The rock band
Tina and the Top Ten, of which Feliciano was the founder and leader and
which was active from 1989 to 1998, and his work with Rafael Toral as
the duo No Noise Reduction since 1990 define his musical career. His
artistic output has often incorporated references to this world: The
seminal installation Minding, 1991 (not in this show), presented in an
old, darkened cistern, combines a phosphorescent wall painting of four
brains with grindcore and death metal sound tracks at high volume,
randomly interspersed with silence. Crash Music, 1991/2008, is made of
the remains of fifty LP records broken when the artist smashed then
against a wall, accompanied by a text with fifty-six possible
interpretations of the piece itself. Sweet Music, 1992, a color
photograph of candy superimposed on 7" records, was used as a cover
for the CD Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star by Sonic Youth. The
Big Red Puff Sound Site, 1994, consists of a red tarpaulin mattress that
occupies an entire room bathed in blue light earphones hang from the
ceiling playing the songs of Teenage Drool, the sole release by Tina and
the Top Ten. With their performative nature, mythologies of the cultural
underground, and relational aesthetics, these works are emblematic of
Feliciano's fusion of the visual and aural.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The exhibition "The Blues Quartet" also included other
works related to music in general and to the blues in particular.
Kaleidoscopic Blues Machine, 2007, joins a televison monitor and a
cone-shaped structure of blue acrylic to show a silent, black-and-white
video mixing footage of famous and obscure musical performances,
focusing only on the performers' hands and instruments as they
play. The core of the exhibition, however, was the work from which it
takes its title, The Blues Quartet, 2004-2007. This sculpture is
composed of a table divided into four areas by vertical sheets of blue
acrylic whose corners house four colored lightbulbs that blink on and
off in response to musical stimuli--here an iPod whose playlist was
selected by the artist and other musicians. Understanding this work as a
simulacrum of an actual blues quartet, Feliciano developed other
projects associated with it--for example, The Blues Quartet Poster
Series, 2007, based on the appropriation of preexisting album covers,
manipulated in accordance with the graphic identity imagined for the
Blues Quartet, and which hung billboard style on a long wall of the
gallery. Even the idea of a touring band was replicated style on a long
wall of the gallery. Even the idea of a touring band was replicated in
the dynamics of the presentation of "The Blues Quarter,''
with Feliciano having prepared a series of shows in different
institutions throughout performances, such as the Museu do Chiado in
Lisbon, often including live performances, some involving guest
musicians. By bringing together objects, images, and sound with the
collaborative ethos of musical performance, this exhibition encapsulated
all that has made Feliciano's work distinctive on the Portuguese
artistic scene.
Translated from Portuguese by Clifford E. Landers.