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Nara Roesler is pleased to announce Empty Head, Raul Mourão’s first solo exhibition in its New York gallery, from April 27 until June 19, 2021. The presentation includes recent works that synthesize and connect Mourão's formal investigations to a political critique of contemporary issues.


Empty Head showcases two series of sculptures created by Mourão during the social isolation period due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The first series, titled Rebel, brings together three sculptures made of corten steel that weigh approximately 1 ton each. They were created in honor of the experimental music venue Audio Rebel, in Rio de Janeiro. According to the artist, the recent works are closer to a machinic grammar that brings in more weight, uses more material, and generates greater visual shuffling, as well as a more intimidating tone.

 

Mourão argues that the works are more than kinetic sculptures, positing them as interactive objects whose dynamism depends on the audience’s touch and interaction. For Mourão, public engagement with the sculptures is a metaphor for his own engagement with society. He believes that the sculptures’ movements might instigate a consideration about the  bewilderment, we experience when facing a constantly changing reality, that is accelerated and saturated with information. The sculptures’ weight, while making use of gravity as a physical force invite the audience to ponder about movement and fixity, weight and lightness, violence and care, and ultimately life and death.


In opposition to the large-scale sculptures of the Rebel series, the artist also presents a set of more fragile and delicate kinetic works, made of glass and steel. By incorporating everyday objects as the bases of his pendular structures, Mourão reaffirms the irony and the nonsense as structural elements in his practice.


The New Brazilian Flag #3, a work that resignifies the Brazilian flag, is also part of the exhibition and was created during the 2018 Rio de Janeiro carnival. At the festivity, Mourão displayed the country’s flag without its central starry blue circle, which represents the federations and holds the inscription ‘order and progress.’ The work was first installed at Arcos da Lapa, one of Rio de Janeiro’s postcards, a traditional bohemian neighborhood, and the scenario of several artistic and political events. In the following years, the artist unfolded the same motif into different compositions and arrangements, which updated the work vis-à-vis the actual political context and how Brazil is dealing with the sanitary crisis.

 

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In the video Bang Bang (2017), a sequence of glass bottles and metal sculptures are destroyed by a firearm in a training facility. The work’s careful production invites us to think of violence, be it in a broad institutional sense or more specifically, connected to the systematic attack on arts and culture in Brazil. Mourão’s visual constructions seek to breed reflections on the art system and society as a whole. They also pose poignant criticism tied to new ways of imagining the yet-to-come.