Summer Teas >> Nacional Trovoa

Summer Teas – Collective reviews ///

Summer Teas Trovoa happens this season at Capacete, with format aimed to talks dedicated to reviewing critically the artwork of each otherso we can together evolve in our poetics and languages. The proposal is the exchange as the discourse construction about our researchesbeing comfortable for everyone in a collective wayThuswe invite all racialized artists that feel at ease to brig a artwork (original, printed or digital formto share and talk about art without white or masculine interferences ✨ while we eat and drink our tea ??? 

“The idea for National Trovoa had your beggining in march of 2019 with four artistsracialized womeneach one of them reflecting about the presence of their bodies in the world. Black or non-white womenall of them involved with construction of art. They come from a movement that draws attention for the lack of visibilityspaceremuneration, in other words, for the context of artist racialized women. 

The discussion has grown and resulted in a collective as space of possible exchange, as the project’s manifesto says: “We are a group of artists and curators that got together with the intention of making a national visual arts exhibition produced by black and non-white womenWe realized the need to talk and show our plurality of languagesdiscoursesresearches and medias produced by us as racialized women”.” 

(Free translation of fragment from text by Keyna Eleisonindependent curator and member of National Trovoa, published originally in portuguese in http://amlatina.contemporaryand.com/pt/editorial/projeto-trovoa/) 

Photographies by Loli Brito. @ondadouro

 

support: @sui


Millena Lízia

 

 

 

Millena Lízia is a person living this world in search of a walk with dignities and health. She seeks the simplicity, because the most trivial things come to her with layers of challenges and complexities. Among her institutionalized backgrounds are the postgraduate degree in Contemporary Arts’ Studies (2018) from the Universidade Federal Fluminense, the Film and Video Editing course (2012) from the Escola de Cinema Darcy Ribeiro and the Graphic Design degree from the Instituto Federal Fluminense (2009). She has been collaborating since 2011 with various meetings, productions, talks, collective exhibitions and educational propositions. She is a researcher and contemporary-ancestor artist-after-the-2000-year, which has been organized since the diasporic agitations of pictorial-epidermic lived experiences – just another possible way of presentation, which wants to point out that her field of action is in existence, in relationships, displacements, confrontations and escapes since the the imaginary production.

Coups, rising extreme poverty, labor reform, military intervention, dismantling of public education and affirmative action programs, increasing black murder while there is a decrease in white homicide rates, execution of university students across racial and gender differences outside and inside university campus, all sorts of symbolic obliterations and waste of life. Faced with such circumstances, of so many vulnerabilities, surely are not questions such as what is art?, what is the art object?, what is contemporary art? or how to make art? that have been taking the energies of an entire population that in recent decades has seen itself in social mobilities and occupying spaces of power that previously were deprived for them, but, instead, how to produce life?, because in this times in which we are living is the struggle for our existence and the understanding of our fragilities that mark our urgencies. What kind of designs have these risky conditions been produced? And what are the escape lines?

Millena Lízia’s proposal at Capacete is interested in promoting regular meetings with artists and researchers in the field of visual arts (and related areas) whose existences are crossed by colonialities in order to strengthen networks, to think about strategies of maintenance and resistance in historically elitist spaces, to back our attention to our health, to exchange research, to strengthen ties, to interchange our productions, to think about the dialogues that our productions make between them and to answer, perhaps, with aesthetic propositions these meetings, knowing that it is the struggle for life, in all its power, our main focus.