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Venue: Gropius Bau
Founded 1985 in Franco da Rocha, BR
With works by Aurora Cursino dos Santos, Maria Aparecida Dias,
Ubirajara Ferreira Braga, Masayo Seta
The understanding and acknowledgement of artistic work by patients from psychiatric hospitals has a very singular history in Brazil, and Dr. Osório Cesar (1895–1979), together with the better known Dr. Nise da Silveira (1905–1999), is a fundamental influence. César, a reader of Hans Prinzhorn’s writings, led the national reform of the asylum system from his position at the Hospital Franco da Rocha, in Juquery, near São Paulo. In 1933, he partnered with artist Flávio de Carvalho to organize “The Month of the Children and the Mentally Ill” at the Clube dos Artistas Modernos (Club of Modern Artists, or CAM). In the midst of a growing modern movement, Carvalho and Cesar shared an interest in exhibiting the creativity of patients in psychiatric institutions, which they understood to be connected to a natural aptitude, unaffected by the artifice promoted by art academies. They identified in these works a “virgin” imaginary (a term introduced by art critic Mário Pedrosa), untouched by academic dogmas.
Even though Cesar’s therapeutic method made use of drawing, painting, and sculpture, he defended the resulting works’ artistry, their “creative exuberance,” and saw in them a “freedom” that made them equal in artistic value to the work of modernist artists. This set Cesar apart from the majority of his colleagues, who interpreted their patients’ artworks on the basis of their medical history or clinical biography; he believed those works should leave the hospital and enter the museum. In response, this selection of works from the Museu de Arte Osório Cesar, which was founded in 1985, are exhibited as artworks that deal with issues pertinent to us today, such as the perception of time and the act of waiting in confinement, the deconstruction of the figure of the religious leader, the subaltern position of Indigenous peoples, and the subsumption of children under the adult world. These artists, still considered by many as “outsiders,” show the relation between the concept of madness and the sickness of modernity, both the result of its normativity and its desire for control.
Lisette Lagnado
Freiheit für Chile!
Anonymous
Photo album
Solidarity and Storytelling. Rumors against Enclosure
María Berríos
Essay
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
„Klaus Eckschen: Hörspiel“
Die Remise
Hörspiel
St Sara Kali George
Delaine Le Bas
Soundscape
Género y colonialidad en busca de claves de lectura y de un vocabulario estratégico descolonial
Rita Segato
Essay
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Founded 1985 in Franco da Rocha, BR
With works by Aurora Cursino dos Santos, Maria Aparecida Dias,
Ubirajara Ferreira Braga, Masayo Seta
The understanding and acknowledgement of artistic work by patients from psychiatric hospitals has a very singular history in Brazil, and Dr. Osório Cesar (1895–1979), together with the better known Dr. Nise da Silveira (1905–1999), is a fundamental influence. César, a reader of Hans Prinzhorn’s writings, led the national reform of the asylum system from his position at the Hospital Franco da Rocha, in Juquery, near São Paulo. In 1933, he partnered with artist Flávio de Carvalho to organize “The Month of the Children and the Mentally Ill” at the Clube dos Artistas Modernos (Club of Modern Artists, or CAM). In the midst of a growing modern movement, Carvalho and Cesar shared an interest in exhibiting the creativity of patients in psychiatric institutions, which they understood to be connected to a natural aptitude, unaffected by the artifice promoted by art academies. They identified in these works a “virgin” imaginary (a term introduced by art critic Mário Pedrosa), untouched by academic dogmas.
Even though Cesar’s therapeutic method made use of drawing, painting, and sculpture, he defended the resulting works’ artistry, their “creative exuberance,” and saw in them a “freedom” that made them equal in artistic value to the work of modernist artists. This set Cesar apart from the majority of his colleagues, who interpreted their patients’ artworks on the basis of their medical history or clinical biography; he believed those works should leave the hospital and enter the museum. In response, this selection of works from the Museu de Arte Osório Cesar, which was founded in 1985, are exhibited as artworks that deal with issues pertinent to us today, such as the perception of time and the act of waiting in confinement, the deconstruction of the figure of the religious leader, the subaltern position of Indigenous peoples, and the subsumption of children under the adult world. These artists, still considered by many as “outsiders,” show the relation between the concept of madness and the sickness of modernity, both the result of its normativity and its desire for control.
Lisette Lagnado
Being in Crisis together – Einander in Krisen begegnen
Feminist Health Care Research Group (Inga Zimprich/Julia Bonn)
Online workshop
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
„Klaus Eckschen: Hörspiel“
Die Remise
Hörspiel
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Founded 1985 in Franco da Rocha, BR
With works by Aurora Cursino dos Santos, Maria Aparecida Dias,
Ubirajara Ferreira Braga, Masayo Seta
The understanding and acknowledgement of artistic work by patients from psychiatric hospitals has a very singular history in Brazil, and Dr. Osório Cesar (1895–1979), together with the better known Dr. Nise da Silveira (1905–1999), is a fundamental influence. César, a reader of Hans Prinzhorn’s writings, led the national reform of the asylum system from his position at the Hospital Franco da Rocha, in Juquery, near São Paulo. In 1933, he partnered with artist Flávio de Carvalho to organize “The Month of the Children and the Mentally Ill” at the Clube dos Artistas Modernos (Club of Modern Artists, or CAM). In the midst of a growing modern movement, Carvalho and Cesar shared an interest in exhibiting the creativity of patients in psychiatric institutions, which they understood to be connected to a natural aptitude, unaffected by the artifice promoted by art academies. They identified in these works a “virgin” imaginary (a term introduced by art critic Mário Pedrosa), untouched by academic dogmas.
Even though Cesar’s therapeutic method made use of drawing, painting, and sculpture, he defended the resulting works’ artistry, their “creative exuberance,” and saw in them a “freedom” that made them equal in artistic value to the work of modernist artists. This set Cesar apart from the majority of his colleagues, who interpreted their patients’ artworks on the basis of their medical history or clinical biography; he believed those works should leave the hospital and enter the museum. In response, this selection of works from the Museu de Arte Osório Cesar, which was founded in 1985, are exhibited as artworks that deal with issues pertinent to us today, such as the perception of time and the act of waiting in confinement, the deconstruction of the figure of the religious leader, the subaltern position of Indigenous peoples, and the subsumption of children under the adult world. These artists, still considered by many as “outsiders,” show the relation between the concept of madness and the sickness of modernity, both the result of its normativity and its desire for control.
Lisette Lagnado
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
#fight4rojava
Graffiti
Invitation to the Species: Cecilia Vicuña
Tamaas / Cecilia Vicuña
Podcast
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
Dani Karavan
Memorial
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Founded 1985 in Franco da Rocha, BR
With works by Aurora Cursino dos Santos, Maria Aparecida Dias,
Ubirajara Ferreira Braga, Masayo Seta
The understanding and acknowledgement of artistic work by patients from psychiatric hospitals has a very singular history in Brazil, and Dr. Osório Cesar (1895–1979), together with the better known Dr. Nise da Silveira (1905–1999), is a fundamental influence. César, a reader of Hans Prinzhorn’s writings, led the national reform of the asylum system from his position at the Hospital Franco da Rocha, in Juquery, near São Paulo. In 1933, he partnered with artist Flávio de Carvalho to organize “The Month of the Children and the Mentally Ill” at the Clube dos Artistas Modernos (Club of Modern Artists, or CAM). In the midst of a growing modern movement, Carvalho and Cesar shared an interest in exhibiting the creativity of patients in psychiatric institutions, which they understood to be connected to a natural aptitude, unaffected by the artifice promoted by art academies. They identified in these works a “virgin” imaginary (a term introduced by art critic Mário Pedrosa), untouched by academic dogmas.
Even though Cesar’s therapeutic method made use of drawing, painting, and sculpture, he defended the resulting works’ artistry, their “creative exuberance,” and saw in them a “freedom” that made them equal in artistic value to the work of modernist artists. This set Cesar apart from the majority of his colleagues, who interpreted their patients’ artworks on the basis of their medical history or clinical biography; he believed those works should leave the hospital and enter the museum. In response, this selection of works from the Museu de Arte Osório Cesar, which was founded in 1985, are exhibited as artworks that deal with issues pertinent to us today, such as the perception of time and the act of waiting in confinement, the deconstruction of the figure of the religious leader, the subaltern position of Indigenous peoples, and the subsumption of children under the adult world. These artists, still considered by many as “outsiders,” show the relation between the concept of madness and the sickness of modernity, both the result of its normativity and its desire for control.
Lisette Lagnado
A Moment of True Decolonization / Episode #6: Sinthujan Varatharajah. Constructing the Tamil Eelam State
The Funambulist / Sinthujan Varatharajah
Podcast
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
Dani Karavan
Memorial
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
Invitation to the Species: Cecilia Vicuña
Tamaas / Cecilia Vicuña
Podcast
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
New Look
Flávio de Carvalho
Performance
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.