Helena
Almeida (Lisbon, Portugal, 1934–2018) produced a singular work during
the 1960s characterised by a profound interest in the body and its
central place — that records,
occupies and defines space — and its performative encounter with the
world. The first abstract canvases by the artist were a critical
approach to the limits of the pictorial space and the literal conditions
of painting. That interest extended to photography
in the 1070s, when the distinctive space of the artist’s studio and of
the female body, fragmented and partially obscured, became recurring
presences. Helena Almeida meticulously outlines a choreography in the
composition of her works, with drawings and sketches
that highlight her use of the colour and the body, an example of which
is the series Inhabited Paintings [Pinturas
Habitadas] (1975).
This
exhibition brings together a selection of works by Helena Almeida drawn
from the important
group of works by the artist held in the Serralves Collection,
integrating as well as a set of works from the Luso-American Development
Foundation (FLAD) Collection. This initiative is part of the Touring
Exhibitions Programme of the Serralves Collection,
which aims to make the Foundation’s collection accessible to different
Audiences across the
country.
Production: Fundação de Serralves — Museu de Arte Contemporânea, Porto
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