Fernanda Fragateiro, a voice (not), Josée Bienvenu Gallery, installation view

Fernanda Fragateiro, a voice (not), Josée Bienvenu Gallery, installation view

Fernanda Fragateiro, a voice (not), Josée Bienvenu Gallery, installation view

Fernanda Fragateiro, a voice (not),Josée Bienvenu Gallery, installation view

Fernanda Fragateiro, a voice (not), Josée Bienvenu Gallery, installation view

Fernanda Fragateiro
Building Blocks, 6, 2017
White marble from Estremoz (Portugal) and cut volumes from Grande Enciclopédia Luso-Brasileira da Cultura, Ed. Verbo (1963)
Variable dimensions
Fernanda Fragateiro
Stones Against Diamonds, after Lina Bo Bardi, 2017
Acrylic and book “Stones Against Diamonds” (by Lina Bo Bardi, London: Architectural Association Publications, 2013)
7.20h x 4.57w x 4.13d in
Fernanda Fragateiro
folding table, 2017
Polished stainless steel
25.39h x 18.90w x 4.13d in
Fernanda Fragateiro
Supercritical, 2017
Polished stainless steel and copies of the book “Supercritical: Peter Eisenman meets Rem Koolhaas” (by Peter Eisenman and Rem Koolhaas London: Architectural Association Publications, 2009)
7.09h x 4.33w x 3.94d in
Fernanda Fragateiro
Tectonic Acts of Desire and Doubt, 2017
Polished stainless steel and copies of the book: Tectonic Acts of Desire and Doubt (by Mark Rakatansky,London: Architectural Association Publications, 2012)
7.09h x 4.33w x 4.13d in
Fernanda Fragateiro
Christmas and New Year’s Card, after Otti Berger (1937), 2016
Acrylic and silk textile (silk produced by Susana Martins and Julia Gabriel from Casulo Dourado - Associação da Seda de Freixo de Espada à Cinta and weaving by Ana Gonçalves)
22.05h x 13.78w x 2.95d i
Fernanda Fragateiro
Modernity Unbound, 2017
Polished stainless steel and copies of the book “Modernity Unbound: Other Histories of Architectural Modernity” (by Detlef Mertins, London: Architectural Association Publications, 2011)
7.09h x 4.33w x 4.13d i
Fernanda Fragateiro
Stones Against Diamonds, 2017
Polished stainless steel and copies of the book “Stones Against Diamonds” (by Lina Bo Bardi, London: Architectural Association Publications, 2013)
7.09h x 4.33w x 4.13d i
Fernanda Fragateiro
Double Having Words, 2017
Polished stainless steel and copies of the book “Having Words” (by Denise Scott Brown,London: Architectural Association Publications, 2009)
13.78h x 4.33w x 4.13d i

Fernanda Fragateiro
Double Black and White, 3, 2016
Stainless steel and handmade notebooks with fabric cover
19.88h x 38.58w x 8.27d in

Fernanda Fragateiro

a voice (not)

September 7 - November 4, 2017

Opening reception: Thursday, September 7, from 6pm to 8pm
 

The gallery is pleased to inaugurate its new location with the first New York exhibition of Portuguese artist Fernanda Fragateiro. The exhibition will open on September 7 and will be on view through November 4, 2017. Fragateiro’s sculptural and architectural interventions are often found in unexpected spaces (a monastery, an orphanage, dilapidated houses, or even shaping the overall design of a public park) with subtle alterations of existing landscapes that reveal buried stories. Through her research-based method and revision of 20th century avant-garde practices in art, design, and architecture, Fragateiro attempts to understand spatiality from a new perspective. “Ideas are materials. Ideas are like bricks. That’s what I think when I’m using other people’s ideas. I build a new thing with them. You look at a building and see how it is built — what is the volume, the texture, the colors, what materials were used in the construction. But there are also a lot of things not visible. I work with these “other things”, things that are not immediately visible in someone else’s ideas.”1
 

In forget me (not), a multi-panel wall sculpture, Fragateiro’s establishes an artistic dialogue with the work of Otti Berger — an overlooked textile artist and key participant and professor in the Bauhaus who, as a Jew in Nazi Germany, was ultimately sent to her death in the Auschwitz concentration camp. Fragateiro’s new works were inspired by Berger’s experimental example, particularly in their tactile and optical qualities. In her keen interest in re-thinking and probing modernist practices, Fragateiro frequently repurposes already-existing and symbolically layered material, such as silk threads found in a German factory or second-hand books and magazines. Her complex yet delicate work is criss- crossed by an intricate web of inner references to architectural history and art theory.
 

“Fernanda Fragateiro’s sculptural work is evidently related to architecture and other spatial practices. However, this relationship is not only important because she establishes formal connections with, and draws inspiration from architectural sources. Rather, the correlations she devises are crucial because they dig into architecture culture to trigger a critical revision of whom has the power to define space as a cultural and social construct. Establishing a political, subtly feminist position, she uncovers what architectural structures have often maintained hidden – from gestures of mostly absent female subjects, down to meanings subdued by specialist publications or the walls of museum institutions. In this process, she allows her audience to understand what remains imperceptibly unchanged in our social context, and points to topics that still require inquiry and examination, namely through artistic investigation. Her work is precise, aesthetically powerful, spatially engaging – and, yet, it is also revelatory beyond the mere, beautiful aggregation of forms, objects and references”.
 

Fernanda Fragateiro (Lisbon, 1962) lives and works in Lisbon, Portugal. Her solo exhibition at the Museu de Arte, Arquitectura e Tecnologia MAAT, Lisboa, PT is on view through September 18, 2017. Select exhibitions include: Fundação Eugénio de Almeida, Évora, PT (2017); Porta 14 - Calçada do Correio Velho, Lisbon, PT (2017); Arratia Beer Gallery, Berlin, DE (2017); Galería Elba Benitez, Madrid, ES (2017); Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (2015); the Krannert Art Museum, Champaign, IL (2015); the Palais des Beaux-Arts de Paris, FR (2015); CIFO Art Space, Miami, FL (2014); the Bronx Museum, New York (2014); Koldo Mitxelena Kulturunea, San Sebastián, ES (2014); MUAC Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico, D.F. (2014); Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, PT (2012); Dublin Contemporary, Dublin, IE (2011); the Lisbon Architecture Triennale (2010); the Fundación Marcelino Botín, Santander, ES (2009); IVAM Institut Valencià d’Art Modern, Valencia, ES (2008); CCB Fundação Centro Cultural de Belém, Lisbon, PT (2007); CGAC Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela, ES (2006); the Serralves Foundation, Lisbon, PT (2005); CaixaForum Barcelona, ES (2004); Culturgest, Lisboa, PT (2003) and Künstlerwerkstatt, Munich, DE (1997). Public collections include: MNCARS Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, ES; PAMM Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL; The Ella Fontanals Cisneros Collection, Miami, FL; Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA; Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, PT; Fundació “la Caixa”, Barcelona, ES; Fundación Helga de Alvear, Cáceres, ES; Fundación Marcelino Botín, Santander, ES; CGAC Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela, ES; and ARTIUM Centro-Museo Vasco de Arte Contemporáneo, Vitoria, ES.
 

1 “‘Ideas Are Like Bricks’: Fernanda Fragateiro Interviewed by George Stolz”, NC-Arte, Bogotá, Colombia, 2015 (exhibition catalogue).

2 “On Spatial Constructs: Fernanda Fragateiro’s Recent Oeuvre”, MAAT, Lisbon, Portugal, 2017 (exhibition catalogue).