Open: Tue-Fri 2pm-7pm & by appointment

via Alto Adige 176, 38121, Trento, Italy
Open: Tue-Fri 2pm-7pm & by appointment


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Debora Hirsch: Até aqui

Boccanera, Trento

Sat 11 Sep 2021 to Tue 16 Nov 2021

via Alto Adige 176, 38121 Debora Hirsch: Até aqui

Tue-Fri 2pm-7pm & by appointment

Artist: Debora Hirsch

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Curated by Giuseppe Frangi

For her new solo exhibition at the Boccanera Gallery in Trento and Milan, Debora Hirsch presents a series of recent paintings and videos in which she continues her fascinating work of stitching together opposing poles – geographical, mental and visual – between past and future, the real and the virtual, the natural and the artificial.


Artworks

Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (pintura de forro), 2020

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

810.0 × 810.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (river veins), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

820.0 × 820.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (wood), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

880.0 × 880.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (man over nature), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

880.0 × 880.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (calabash 2), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

880.0 × 880.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (key 2), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

900.0 × 900.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (boots and stick), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

1100.0 × 1100.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (compass), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

1100.0 × 1100.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (dalet), 2018

Acrylics and ink on canvas

1300.0 × 860.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (natural history), 2019 - 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

1300.0 × 860.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (pedestals), 2019 - 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

1300.0 × 860.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (riverrun), 2019

Acrylics and ink on canvas

1830.0 × 1110.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (flag), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

1320.0 × 20.0 × 500.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento (pelourinho), 2021

Acrylics and oil pencil on canvas

1100.0 × 1860.0 mm

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Debora Hirsch, Firmamento, 2019

Digital video and animation

Duration 6’

Edition of 3 plus 1 AP

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Debora Hirsch, Binary Fresco, 2020

Digital video and animation

Duration 3’ 49’’

Edition of 3 plus 1 AP

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Debora Hirsch, Planet, 2020

Digital video and animation

Duration 5’ 30’’

Edition of 3 plus 1 AP

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Installation Views

Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera Installation image for Debora Hirsch: Até aqui, at Boccanera

Each of the artist’s works is the result of an extraordinary process of assembly and dissimulation. Behind each work lies a precise construction of memories and thoughts, which often refer to the world from which Debora Hirsch comes, i.e. the ‘new world’. Then – as suggested by the great Brazilian poet Oswald de Andrade, to whom the title of the exhibition pays homage – the pictorial process leads to the emergence of an unprecedented situation: images of an ‘ultra-new’ world that does not erase what has been, that does not eliminate opposites but which places them within a liquid horizon where everything still remains possible. Debora Hirsch’s painting is that of a new matriarchal sphere, where the images of the world and of history are recomposed in a configuration that allows opposites to flow into one another yet without being cancelled. Até aqui – ‘Up to Here’ or ‘Thus Far’ – indicates this ever-moving horizon, the ‘firmamento’ mentioned in the title/suffix of all her works, towards which the artist’s painting has shifted.
Among the new works Debora Hirsch is presenting in Trento there is a series of square canvases, a format on which the artist has worked with single-minded and meaningful obstinacy. The square, which in Western culture evokes the clarity of rationality, is here intended to enclose fluid images, at times almost amniotic, permeated with substrates that escape and lead towards mutant depths. In the perimeter of the square, clarity is by no means disavowed, but brought to a higher condition in which it assumes mobile forms, reluctant to embrace any interpretative rigidity. And yet within those forms, history is condensed, along with all its wounds, as in the beautiful ‘Firmamento (pelourinho)’, which recalls a whipping post used by the conquerors; geography, with rivers that become the venous system of painting ‘Firmamento (river veins)’; and nature with its everyday and at the same time totemic structures at ‘Firmamento (calabash 2)’.
It is a horizon along which the separation between painting and digital imagery fades. Filaments appear on the canvases that are both aerial roots and networks nodes. Thus, with great fluidity, the images slide into the screens of Debora Hirsch’s videos, just as naturally as they float across her canvases. Até qui is not a landing place but a ceaseless movement that brings about new movements.

Debora Hirsch was born in São Paulo (BR) in 1967. Lives and works between Milan and São Paulo.
Debora Hirsch is mainly interested in exploring how the structures of power can be subtle, insidious, and imperceptible, as well as brutal and invasive, ranging from historic colonizing dynamics and its legacy, technological control to dynamics acting at a personal level.

Some key themes recur throughout Debora Hirsch’s artworks, such as contemporary anthropology, unnoticed interrelationships and concealed realities, the influence of media and technology on culture and society, defining the multidisciplinary nature of her practice. Although her artwork is often conceptual and appropriative, gathering visuals from archives, old books, digital world, art, and a variety of media, she builds her own imagery and perspective through a metaphysical conception of art.

Her visual language often deliberately invites viewers to investigate and reconsider their actions and existence. Progressing by associations and deductions is her favored method in the production of drawings, paintings, videos, websites, installations, and objects. Debora Hirsch’s artworks are often elaborated snapshots of an ongoing inquiry that includes theories, conjectures, re-interpreting signs about apparently unimportant realities, hidden interconnections, and similarities between distant worlds and times.

Her work is included in some public and private collections such as MOCAK Museum Of Contemporary Art in Krakow (PO), MuBe Museu Brasileiro da Escultura e Ecologia (BR), Casa Testori, (IT), Fondation Francès (FR), Benetton (IT), Arte Mondadori (IT), Ernesto Esposito Collection (IT), AGI Verona Collection (IT), Monte dei Paschi Bank Collection (IT), Museo Premio Suzzara (IT), VR Vittorio Rappa Collection (IT), Fondazione Rivoli2, Milano (IT), Hutchinson Modern, NY (USA), BoCs Museum (IT).
Modern, NY (USA), Museo BoCs (IT).

Courtesy of the artist and Boccanera, Trento/Milano

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