Miguel Palma: Culturgest.
Amado, Miguel
"O Mundo as Avessas" (The World Upside-Down), the most
recent show by Portuguese artist Miguel Palma, brought together eleven
of his most important works, offering for the first time a selective
overview of his prolific output. Dating from 1993 to the present, these
mostly large-scale sculptures chronicle Palma's fascination with
technology and his entropic vision of the world. Most of the works were
installed in separate rooms, however, neutralizing the almost chaotic
aspect of Palma's practice.
One of Palma's most significant works is Engenho (Device),
1993, an elegantly stylized single-seat car that he built and drove from
Lisbon to Porto. This work exemplifies the artist's ongoing
interest in machines, including their evolution and their impact on
daily life. To Palma, cars symbolize the relationship between human
being and machine. Although 2,5 km a 100 km a hora (2.5 km at 100 km per
hour), 2001, a 262-foot-long electric track on which a miniature car
travels, was the only other work on view dealing with the automobile,
there have been many more over the years--for example, Accident Motion
Pictures, 2003, an ambulance containing four video cameras trained on a
miniature city complete with model cars; when driven, the vehicle,
through its motion, causes the little cars to crash into each other, and
footage of these collisions appears on accompanying monitors.
Other works on view reflected Palma's concerns with ecology
and warfare. Ecossistema (Ecosystem), 1995, consists of an inflated
membrane covering a miniature industrial park and residential area and a
ventilation system that creates a closed circuit of pollution. Carbono
14 (Carbon 14), 1998, is a monumental vitrine containing a model
underground city; different layers of sand, stirred by a mechanical
agricultural tool, enfold miniature houses and vehicles. In Tapete
voador (Flying Carpet), 2005, the seat from an F-16 fighter jet is moved
up and down by a turbine placed on top of a handmade Persian rug.
Finally, Little Boy, 2007, presents a model of a commercial airplane
flying in a circle and transporting bombs. This last work, the most
recent of those on view, encapsulates Palma's current practice. He
is a bricoleur, a kind of engineer of bygone times, and a caustic critic
of contemporary society.
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Translated from Portuguese by Clifford E. Landers.