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The São Paulo Neo-Avant-Garde

Radical Art and Mass Print Media in Cold War Brazil
  • Mari Rodríguez Binnie
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2024
View more publications by University of Texas Press

About this book

How artists challenged a military dictatorship through mass print technologies in 1970s and 1980s São Paulo.

Throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, during Brazil's military dictatorship, artists shifted their practices to critique the government and its sanitized images of Brazil, its use of torture, and its targeted persecutions. Mari Rodríguez Binnie's The São Paulo Neo-Avant-Garde examines these artworks and their engagement with politics and mainstream art institutions and practices.

As Binnie skillfully shows, artists appropriated processes like photocopy, offset lithography, and thermal and heliographic printing, making newly available technologies of mass production foundational to their work of resistance against both the dictatorship and the established art world. Often working collaboratively, these artists established alternative networks of exchange locally and internationally to circulate their work. As democracy was reestablished in Brazil, and in the decades that followed, their works largely fell out of sight. Here, in the first English-language book to focus entirely on conceptual practices in São Paulo in the 1970s and 1980s, Binnie unearths a scene critical to the development of contemporary Brazilian Art.

Author / Editor information

Mari Rodríguez Binnie is an assistant professor of art history at Williams College and at the Graduate Program in the History of Art at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute.

Reviews

Mari Rodríguez Binnie offers groundbreaking research on the São Paulo Neo-Avant Garde during Brazil's military dictatorship's "leaden years" (1969–1974) and the subsequent transition to neoliberal democracy. The author demonstrates how radical experimentation with mass print media allowed artists to defy the regime's censorship and the repressive Institutional Act #5 (AI-5). The artists, curators, critics, and philosophers highlighted in this study collaborated, co-created, and founded alternative exhibitions and archival spaces. Most importantly, they harnessed mass media technologies from the fringes to assert their aesthetic and political rights under hostile circumstances. Ariel Dorfman once noted, "Some write to the future." Binnie retrieves those voices and images, offering a glimpse into the dynamic avant-garde movement that championed democracy in Brazil.
— Ana María Reyes, Boston University, author of The Politics of Taste: Beatriz González and Cold War Aesthetics

A major contribution to the growing bibliography on postwar Brazilian art, Mari Rodríguez Binnie’s insightful new study focuses our attention on the period of the military dictatorship in São Paulo. Integrating artists that have long been neglected by existing narratives, Binnie navigates the many competing interests shaping artistic expression. Recasting the artistic activities through the lens of the neo-avant-garde allows the author to examine political repression, the burgeoning art market, and novel graphic experimentation. Her detailed and animated analyses of the works and their sociopolitical context allows one to truly grasp the radical artistic energy of the period and its enduring impact on contemporary art.
— Elena Shtromberg, University of Utah, author of Art Systems: Brazil and the 1970s

A timely book that will appeal to both researchers interested in this pivotal period of Latin American art history and anyone inspired by alternative methods of resistance as the specter of censorship grows more ominous with the rise of political authoritarianism worldwide.
— Hyperallergic

[This book is] a groundbreaking exploration of the alternative art scene in Brazil’s largest metropolis during one of that country’s most politically turbulent periods in modern times...[and] makes a significant contribution by focusing on the young radical artists who defied traditional artistic boundaries and used new technologies to create a critical dialogue with Brazil’s military regime...[This is] a meticulous and thought-provoking work.
— The Americas


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
September 17, 2024
eBook ISBN:
9781477329870
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
216
Other:
85 illustrations
Downloaded on 13.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7560/329863/html
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