Centro Cultural São Paulo Hosts Multiple Exhibitions on Resistance and Latin American Art
The Centro Cultural São Paulo (CCSP) is presenting several exhibitions that position it as a space for freedom and resistance, according to journalist Erika Palomino. One exhibition features posters removed from Ancine, Brazil's national film agency. Another show focuses on the Bahia-based collective Etsedron. A separate exhibition examines the 1978 I Bienal Latino-Americana de São Paulo. Additionally, the CCSP is hosting dialogues between Brazilian and South African artists. National and international institutions are opening calls for residencies. The programming includes an antidisciplinary perspective on a year that begins at the end. Themes of waste, luxury, and the forbidden are explored. The CCSP's agenda for March 24-30 highlights these events. A photographic studio is framed as an act of resistance within this context.
Key facts
- Centro Cultural São Paulo (CCSP) is hosting multiple exhibitions
- Erika Palomino describes CCSP as a space of freedom and resistance
- One exhibition features posters removed from Ancine
- An exhibition focuses on the Bahia collective Etsedron
- A show examines the 1978 I Bienal Latino-Americana de São Paulo
- Dialogues between Brazilian and South African artists are presented
- National and international institutions are opening residency calls
- Programming includes an antidisciplinary perspective
Entities
Artists
- Erika Palomino
Institutions
- Centro Cultural São Paulo (CCSP)
- Ancine
- Etsedron
Locations
- São Paulo
- Brazil
- Bahia
- South Africa