Leda Catunda, Paisagem Selvagem III, 2024, acrylic and enamel on canvas, fabric and plastic, 105 x 60 cm
Leda Catunda Uses Flora to Analyze Image Culture
Texto crítico publicado na revista Frieze sobre exposição da artista no Rio de Janeiro
WEB
Texto crítico publicado na revista Frieze sobre exposição da artista no Rio de Janeiro
WEB
In her new exhibition at Carpintaria, Rio de Janeiro, the São Paulo artist contrasts the city’s lush landscape to her hometown’s concrete geometry
In ‘Paisagem Selvagem’ (Wild Landscape) at Carpintaria, Rio de Janeiro, Leda Catunda draws on her work in painting and fabric collage to create new sculptures inspired by her tenuous relationship with the city. The Paulistan artist’s new works address the perceived tensions between her hometown, stereotypically seen as commercial and formal, and Rio de Janeiro, generally regarded as romantic and dynamic, by combining metonymic symbols of each place. An icon of Geração 80 (Generation 80) – the group of Brazilian artists who rose to prominence during the 1980s with their experimental and challenging works – Catunda here demonstrates both artistic maturity and innovation.
The title alludes to the overgrown flora of Rio – a stark contrast to the geometric skyline of São Paulo, shaped by glass and concrete skyscrapers. Catunda gives us a show filled with flamboyant patterns, colours and materials, as a way, it seems, of responding to sensory overload – whether through contemporary media consumption, urban stimuli or a lush landscape. Her irreverent works render what’s overwhelming as plush and pleasant: ‘affective consumption’ is how the artist described her output in a 2019 interview with curator Fernanda Brenner.
Catunda’s practice often incorporates ovoid and curvy shapes. Earlier works, such as Barriga (Belly, 1993) and Couros II (Leathers II, 1993), employed these ‘soft forms’ – a term frequently used by the artist – in opposition to the rational rigidity of 1970s Brazilian conceptualism. In ‘Paisagem Selvagem’, we see her expanding on what she described in her 2003 doctoral thesis as ‘the poetics of softness’. For Ovo (Egg, 2024), Catunda wove together golden ovals against a large blue gradient teardrop background. In the bean-shaped Azteca (Aztec, 2021), geometric patterns and pre-Columbian figurative iconography are juxtaposed and contained within a gold-fabric frame.
In Cinema (2024), the artist arranges cut-outs of monochromatic movie posters, in a bright presentation resembling a cross between a eukaryotic cell drawing and a pillow. The work’s approachable, naturalistic design is shared by sculptures like Sete saias (Seven Skirts, 2024). Here, she has superimposed pleated garments, painting them silver and adorning them with balangandãs, golden chains and sinuous voile hemlines that resemble the waves off the coast of Rio.
While Catunda’s textile pieces suggest a critique of popular tastes and industrial production with their use of fast-fashion materials, they’re also presented as almost growing out of the local landscape. In the large-scale Caprichosa (Capricious, 2024), a robot-like torso – with a chromatic finish, screws and pistons – wears an openwork skirt made to look like a field of flowers. Carnaval (Carnival, 2023) draws on the city’s festive costumes and their colourful fringes designed to emphasize dance movements.
Carnaval shares similarities with Paisagem Selvagem III (2024), in that both appear like chromatic bushes erupting from the wall, with fabric leaves resembling tongues, belts and peninsulas. Like many of the pieces in the show, this one plays with traditional landscape painting, both by giving it dimension and by including a horizon line. Above the protuberance, a radiant sun rises behind a silhouetted mountain range. The top half of another work in the series, Paisagem Selvagem IV (2024), features several golden moons populating the sky.
Throughout the exhibition, Catunda incorporates images and fabrics appropriated from diverse origins and orders, bringing together geometric abstractionism, pre-Columbian cultures, popular Catholic iconography and brands of sporting goods in a domestic and docile familiarity. Catunda’s maximalist works posit that, while a conceptualist analysis of image culture isn’t a problem per se, it’s better achieved through a naturalistic lens.
Texto originalmente publicado na Frieze, em 12 de setembro de 2024
In ‘Paisagem Selvagem’ (Wild Landscape) at Carpintaria, Rio de Janeiro, Leda Catunda draws on her work in painting and fabric collage to create new sculptures inspired by her tenuous relationship with the city. The Paulistan artist’s new works address the perceived tensions between her hometown, stereotypically seen as commercial and formal, and Rio de Janeiro, generally regarded as romantic and dynamic, by combining metonymic symbols of each place. An icon of Geração 80 (Generation 80) – the group of Brazilian artists who rose to prominence during the 1980s with their experimental and challenging works – Catunda here demonstrates both artistic maturity and innovation.
The title alludes to the overgrown flora of Rio – a stark contrast to the geometric skyline of São Paulo, shaped by glass and concrete skyscrapers. Catunda gives us a show filled with flamboyant patterns, colours and materials, as a way, it seems, of responding to sensory overload – whether through contemporary media consumption, urban stimuli or a lush landscape. Her irreverent works render what’s overwhelming as plush and pleasant: ‘affective consumption’ is how the artist described her output in a 2019 interview with curator Fernanda Brenner.
Catunda’s practice often incorporates ovoid and curvy shapes. Earlier works, such as Barriga (Belly, 1993) and Couros II (Leathers II, 1993), employed these ‘soft forms’ – a term frequently used by the artist – in opposition to the rational rigidity of 1970s Brazilian conceptualism. In ‘Paisagem Selvagem’, we see her expanding on what she described in her 2003 doctoral thesis as ‘the poetics of softness’. For Ovo (Egg, 2024), Catunda wove together golden ovals against a large blue gradient teardrop background. In the bean-shaped Azteca (Aztec, 2021), geometric patterns and pre-Columbian figurative iconography are juxtaposed and contained within a gold-fabric frame.
In Cinema (2024), the artist arranges cut-outs of monochromatic movie posters, in a bright presentation resembling a cross between a eukaryotic cell drawing and a pillow. The work’s approachable, naturalistic design is shared by sculptures like Sete saias (Seven Skirts, 2024). Here, she has superimposed pleated garments, painting them silver and adorning them with balangandãs, golden chains and sinuous voile hemlines that resemble the waves off the coast of Rio.
While Catunda’s textile pieces suggest a critique of popular tastes and industrial production with their use of fast-fashion materials, they’re also presented as almost growing out of the local landscape. In the large-scale Caprichosa (Capricious, 2024), a robot-like torso – with a chromatic finish, screws and pistons – wears an openwork skirt made to look like a field of flowers. Carnaval (Carnival, 2023) draws on the city’s festive costumes and their colourful fringes designed to emphasize dance movements.
Carnaval shares similarities with Paisagem Selvagem III (2024), in that both appear like chromatic bushes erupting from the wall, with fabric leaves resembling tongues, belts and peninsulas. Like many of the pieces in the show, this one plays with traditional landscape painting, both by giving it dimension and by including a horizon line. Above the protuberance, a radiant sun rises behind a silhouetted mountain range. The top half of another work in the series, Paisagem Selvagem IV (2024), features several golden moons populating the sky.
Throughout the exhibition, Catunda incorporates images and fabrics appropriated from diverse origins and orders, bringing together geometric abstractionism, pre-Columbian cultures, popular Catholic iconography and brands of sporting goods in a domestic and docile familiarity. Catunda’s maximalist works posit that, while a conceptualist analysis of image culture isn’t a problem per se, it’s better achieved through a naturalistic lens.
Texto originalmente publicado na Frieze, em 12 de setembro de 2024
Leda Catunda, Caprichosa, 2024, acrylic and enamel on canvas, fabric, plastic and velvet, 260 x 340 cm
Leda Catunda, Cinema, 2024, acrylic and enamel on canvas and fabric, 125 x 125 x 50 cm
Leda Catunda, São Tomás, 2024, acrylic and enamel on canvas, fabric, wood and velvet, 47 x 30 cm
Leda Catunda, Paisagem Selvagem IV, 2024, acrylic and enamel on canvas, fabric, plastic, velvet and voile, 38 x 38 cm
Leda Catunda, Paisagem Selvagem II, 2024, acrylic and enamel on canvas, fabric and plastic, 280 x 205 cm
Leda Catunda, Ovo, 2024, acrylic on canvas, velvet and voile, 200 x 115 cm
Leda Catunda, Azteca, 2021, acrylic on fabric, 54 x 36 cm
Leda Catunda, Sete saias, 2024, acrylic on canvas, leather, voile and chains, 38 x 38 cm
Leda Catunda, Deusa II, 2023, acrylic and enamel on fabric and plastic, 98 x 98 cm
All the photos are by Eduardo Ortega, with exception of Azteca, which is by Ding Musa. All courtesy of the artists and Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel/Carpintaria, São Paulo/Rio de Janeiro.