Biography

According to the curator Agnaldo Farias, Alice Miceli (b. 1980, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is interested in the idea that ‘the collapse of representation is responsible for the collapse of reality’. The artist's work initiates with investigative trips and historical researches through which the artist retraces cultural and physical vestiges of past traumas inflicted on social and natural landscapes.

 

Most notably, Alice Miceli has explored places such as the Prison S21 in Cambodia and Chernobyl's Exclusion Zone where she developed new techniques rooted in the specificity of each place. For example, using a photographic film specifically sensitive to radiation in Chernobyl, Miceli extended her analysis of traumatic events of the past beyond their recognition as memories, also visually capturing the chemical residue of History.

 

Her most recent work focuses on land mines left in post-conflict countriesand on examining the contradiction between the invisibility and the brutality of the military devices. Here, Alice Miceli's focus revolves around the endeavour to visually communicate the consequences of past wars or tragedies in different places accounting for their physical impact and cultural context. In this series, Miceli calls attention to the fact that a change of perspective is able to modify everything, both figuratively and literally.

 

Alice Miceli lives and works in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Recent solo shows include:

Em profundidade (campos minados): Angola e Bósnia, at Escola das Artes da Universidade Católica Portuguesa (2022), in Porto, Portugal; Projeto Chernobyl, at The Americas Society / Council of the Americas (AS/COA) (2019), in New York, USA; Em profundidade (campos-minados), at Instituto PIPA, Villa Aymoré (2019), in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; 88 from 14,000, at Max Protetch Gallery (2011), in New York, USA. She featured in the 17th Istanbul Biennial, Turkey (2022); 5th Moscow International Biennale for Young Art, Russia (2016). Recent group shows include: A intenção e o gesto, 6th CNI SESI SENAI Marcantonio Vilaça Prize, at Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Goiás (MAC-Goiás), in Goiânia; at Museu da Indústria, in Fortaleza; at Museu Histórico Nacional (MHN), in Rio de Janeiro; at Santander Cultural, in Porto Alegre, Brazil (2018); The Materiality of the Invisible, at Jan van Eyck Academieplein (2017), in Maastricht, The Netherlands; Diante do desconhecido: O Outro, at Galeria de Arte Solar (2017), in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and Memory Leak: Views from Between Archiving and Memory, at La Capella (2015), in Barcelona, Spain. Her works are included in important institutional collections, such as: Associação Cultural Videobrasil, São Paulo, Brazil; Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (CIFO), Miami, USA; Moscow Biennale Art Foundation, Moscow, Russia; Museu de Arte Moderna do Rio de Janeiro (MAM Rio), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

News

Press

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