Joao Tabarra: Galeria Graca Brandao/Galeria ZE DOS Bois.
Amado, Miguel
For "G," Joao Tabarra's most ambitious solo show to
date, the artist's dealer, Graca Brandao, joined forces with a
well-known Lisbon independent space. The exhibition comprised nineteen
new works--fourteen videos, a two-channel slide projection, and four
photographs--that constitute a panorama of Tabarra's present
practice. The exhibition's title refers to the gravitational
constant, one of the most difficult values in physics to measure;
although it appears in both Newton's law of gravitation and
Einstein's theory of relativity, it remains imprecise to this day.
Calling attention to this unresolved confusion at the heart of science,
Tabarra is not debunking physics as such; rather, he analyzes
contemporary mythologies in general and the society of the spectacle in
particular, using allegory to question prevailing ideologies, whether
political, economic, or cultural.
But like a lone soldier, Tabarra creates his modus vivendi with the
bitterness of someone conscious that he is fighting a war he can never
win. This is demonstrated in the phrase that served as an epigraph for
the project, a quotation from Pardot Kynes, a character in Brian Herbert
and Kevin J. Anderson's science-fiction novel Dune: House Atreides
(1999): "The human question is not how many can possibly survive
within the system, but what kind of existence is possible for those who
do survive." This sums up the antihero posture Tabarra often
adopts, for instance in the videos O encantador de serpentes (The Snake
Charmer; all works 2007), and Linha de costa (Coastline): In the former,
a man attempts to tame a constantly moving high-pressure fire hose; in
the latter, an idyllic image of a body of water (projected onto the
gallery's ceiling) is interrupted as a person enters the frame,
desperately trying to avoid drowning as his head is forcibly plunged
underwater.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
In these and many other photographs and videos, Tabarra himself is
the protagonist. In the photograph A segunda morte de Rocinante (The
Second Death of Rocinante), the artist plays the role of a criminal
investigator preparing to examine a body buried in an empty lot; he is
surrounded by five men, one of whom is a police officer, and an elderly
woman. In the video Roda (Circle), he appears as one of a group of
people, some of whom warm their hands by a fire in the middle of a
forest. The first work alludes to a type of scene familiar from news
media, whereas the second evokes a collective ritual that reminds us of
primitive or utopian communities.
Images of the subjection of the body to extreme physical duress, as
a metaphor for symbolic violence, perhaps constitute Tabarra's most
highly developed conceptual strategy, and in Exodo (Exodus), he reaches
his technical and aesthetic apex. With the noise of a helicopter engine
as an aural background, a bird's-eye shot from a shaky camcorder
captures the artist being rescued, first at sea and then from a swimming
pool, over and over again. Bringing to mind the metaphor of shipwreck,
so frequent in existentialist literature and cinema, Tabarra reflects
his jaundiced view of the human condition: The man's rescuers are
the same people who keep abandoning him.
--Miguel Amado
Translated from Portuguese by Clifford E. Landers.