João Louro
Transcrição
João Louro
João Louro João Louro’s body of work encompasses painting, sculpture, photography and video. His work, descending from minimal and conceptual art, with special attention to the avant-garde, is a register of time that expresses his view of art and culture as self-referential systems. The platform for the reading of his works cannot be separated from the cultural horizon of modernity and of post-industrial society. It draws out a topography of references that are as personal as they are generational, with regular recourse to language as a source, as well as the written word and a review of the image in contemporary culture, starting out from a set of representations and symbols from the collective visual universe. Minimalism, conceptualism, Pop culture, structuralism and poststructuralism, authors such as Walter Benjamin, Guy Debord, Georges Bataille and Blanchot as well as artists like Donald Judd and the everpresent Duchamp, form the referential lexical universe of the artist. The Bermuda Triangle, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA, 2016 Christopher Grimes Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of works by João Louro. A key artist in Portugal, Louro’s work descends from the conceptual framework of post-minimalism. His appropriation of literature, film and popular culture explores and codifies visual language binding artistic reference into a unified meaning. For this exhibition, his third with the gallery, Louro presents works from three of his ongoing series. In his famous Blind Image series, Louro uses a blank plexiglass surface to reflect the viewer’s gaze, accompanied by a line taken from classic books or film as a caption, inviting the viewer to create his or her own images to go along with the textual narrative. Louro will also exhibit new works from his Clockwise from Above and Left to Right series where he composes an arrangement of monochromatic painted plexiglass panels provoking a dialog between the image devoid of content and the viewer’s engagement in completing his or her own version of events suggested by the accompanying didactics. In the South Gallery, Louro will present 5 Minutes after Violent Death, where he has taken images from iconic films such as The Misfits and North by Northwest and stamped the title line on top of each image to evoke a shared memory by use of well known cultural points of reference. Clockwise from Above #02 (Pablo Picasso King of the Hill), detail Clockwise from Above #02 (Pablo Picasso King of the Hill), 2010 acrylic on plexiglass individual panels: 57-3/4 x 44-3/4 inches, 146.5 x 113.5 cm 44-3/4 x 59 inches, 113.5 x 150.5 cm 32 x 39-1/2 inches, 81.5 x 100.5 cm 44-1/4 x 58 inches, 112.5 x 147.5 cm overall: 102-1/4 x 117 inches, 260 x 297 cm JL054 Bermuda Triangle, detail Bermuda Triangle, 2016 acrylic on plexiglass individual panels: 51-3/8 x 40-3/8 inches, 130.5 x 102.5 cm 47-1/2 x 33-1/2 inches, 120.5 x 85.5 cm 49-3/4 x 40-3/8 inches, 126.5 x 102.5 cm overall: 125-1/2 x 108-1/2 inches, 318-3/4 x 275-1/2 cm JL055 From Left to Right (Malevich), 2016 acrylic on plexiglass each panel: 81 x 60-1/4 inches, 205.5 x 153 cm overall: 83 x 123 inches, 211 x 312.5 cm JL057 5 Minutes After Violent Death, 2014, photograph and stamp, each panel (20): 8 x 12 inches, 20.5 x 30.5 cm, overall: 41 x 71-3/4 inches, 104 x 182 cm, JL058 5 Minutes After Violent Death, detail 5 Minutes After Violent Death, detail EXHIBITION CHECKLIST (To request pricing information, please click on a description): Clockwise from Above #02 (Pablo Picasso King of the Hill), 2010 acrylic on plexiglass individual panels: 57-3/4 x 44-3/4 inches, 146.5 x 113.5 cm 44-3/4 x 59 inches, 113.5 x 150.5 cm 32 x 39-1/2 inches, 81.5 x 100.5 cm 44-1/4 x 58 inches, 112.5 x 147.5 cm overall: 102-1/4 x 117 inches, 260 x 297 cm JL054 Bermuda Triangle, 2016 acrylic on plexiglass individual panels: 51-3/8 x 40-3/8 inches, 130.5 x 102.5 cm 47-1/2 x 33-1/2 inches, 120.5 x 85.5 cm 49-3/4 x 40-3/8 inches, 126.5 x 102.5 cm overall: 125-1/2 x 108-1/2 inches, 318-3/4 x 275-1/2 cm JL055 From Left to Right (Malevich), 2016 acrylic on plexiglass each panel: 81 x 60-1/4 inches, 205.5 x 153 cm overall: 83 x 123 inches, 211 x 312.5 cm JL057 5 Minutes After Violent Death, 2014 photograph and stamp each panel (20): 8 x 12 inches, 20.5 x 30.5 cm overall: 41 x 71-3/4 inches, 104 x 182 cm JL058 João Louro had the distinction of representing Portugal in the 56th Venice Biennale titled All the World’s Futures, curated by Okwui Enwezor. Louro’s exhibition titled I Will Be Your Mirror - poems and problems, is curated by Maria de Corral and will take place in the Instituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, Palazzo Loredan, San Marco. João Louro I Will Be Your Mirror– Poems and Problems Venice Biennale 2015 The thrust of the project that João Louro presents in Venice borrows the title of a song from The Velvet Underground—”I’ll Be Your Mirror.” Louro sets out an overview of his career, of his artistic and cultural convictions, his concerns and aesthetic and sociological decisions. Through elements taken from Minimalism and Conceptual Art, João Louro is an intensely conceptual artist, one whose intensity is shown in his presentation and interpretation of the world, in his musical phrasing of experience and in his commitment to bringing things to their limit, through a stunning unfolding of calculated tension and control. Louro builds his own world according to the traces that his readings, music and the cinema have left in his path; fusing these traces he builds a sort of autobiography, a personal diary, in which the texts or events are charged with meaning. The works created specifically for the Portuguese Pavilion, which have been extraordinarily well adapted to the space in each room of the Palazzo Loredan Library, highlight the concern that João Louro has always shown in generating new semantic aspects and raising doubts about norms accepted by our visual culture, as well as in converting the spectator’s role into that of a participant, creating invented places and imagining scenes and inhabiting words that allow us to cultivate our deepest desires and aspirations. The works Dead Ends are related to the challenge of language. In these he uses road signs as symbols that are automatically recognisable; only afterwards does the spectator reach the second level of reading, which are the contents. In the series “Blind Images” the spectator is faced with a canvas on which the image has been blanked out, hidden beneath a coating of glossy acrylic and a glass panel that produces the effect of a mirror. At the bottom of the canvas there is a text alluding to or descriptive of the cancelled image, thus provoking different approaches to what is visible or varying perspectives through which one can consider the image. João Louro’s conceptual work is a questioning about the limits and the expressive capacity of the image, reflecting outside the narrow margin of the work of art itself. -by Curator María de Corral Installation view, João Louro: I Will Be Your Mirror -- Poems and Problems, Venice Biennale, 2015 Waiting for Someone, 2005, lightjet print, laminated on aluminum, 71.26 x 98.43 inches, unframed, 181 x 250 cm, edition of 2 Dead End #16, 2015, metallic panels, 110-1/4 x 196-7/8 inches, 280 x 500 cm, JL045 Map, 2015, printed canvas, dimensions variable, JL046 Blind Image #201 (Maurice Blanchot), 2015, acrylic on canvas, 472-1/2 x 78-3/4 inches, 1200 x 200 cm, JL050 The End, 2008, acrylic on plexiglass, 78-3/4 x 118 inches, 200 x 300 cm JL04 Cover #18 (Dylan Thomas), 2015 acrylic on raw canvas 78-3/4 x 63 inches, framed 200 x 160 cm JL047 Cover #17 (Gustave Flaubert), 2015 acrylic on raw canvas 63 x 117 inches, framed 160 x 297 cm JL051 Cover #19 (Herman Melville), 2015 acrylic on raw canvas 63 x 117 inches, framed 160 x 297 cm JL052 BIENNALE CHECKLIST (To request pricing information, please click on a description): Dead End #16, 2015 metallic panels 110.24 x 196.85 inches 280 x 500 cm JL045 Map, 2015 printed canvas dimensions variable JL046 Blind Image #199 (Arthur Rimbaud), 2015 acrylic on plexiglass 31-1/2 x 23-5/8 inches 80 x 60 cm JL048 Blind Image #201 (Maurice Blanchot), 2015 acrylic on canvas 472-1/2 x 78-3/4 inches 1200 x 200 cm JL050 Cover #19 (Herman Melville), 2015 acrylic on raw canvas 63 x 117 inches, framed 160 x 297 cm JL052 Cover #18 (Dylan Thomas), 2015 acrylic on raw canvas 78-3/4 x 63 inches, framed 200 x 160 cm JL047 Cover #17 (Gustave Flaubert), 2015 acrylic on raw canvas 63 x 117 inches, framed 160 x 297 cm JL051 The End, 2008 acrylic on plexiglass 78-3/4 x 118 inches 200 x 300 cm JL049 Waiting for Someone, 2005 lightjet print, laminated on aluminum 71.26 x 98.43 inches, unframed 181 x 250 cm Edition 2 of 2 JL044 From Left to Right #07 (Mermaids), 2016 acrylic on plexiglass each panel: 47-1/2 x 47-1/2, 120.5 x 120.5 overall: 47-1/2 x 95 inches,120.5 x 241 cm JL056 Joao Louro Clockwise from Above #04, 2015 acrylic paint and plexiglass 76-3/4 x 102-1/2 inches 195 x 260 cm JL053 Cover #08 Leaves of Grass, Walt Withman, 2014 acrylic on raw canvas 64-1/2 x 80-1/4 inches 164 x 204 cm, framed JL062 Site Scene #12, 2008 acrylic on 400g Arches paper and silkscreen print 67-3/8 x 52 inches 171 x 132 cm, framed JL061 Le Mepris #02, 2008 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 39-1/4 x 32 inches (framed) 100 x 81 cm JL040 9 Months Later, 2008 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 21-1/4 x 25-1/2 inches (framed) 54 x 65 cm JL042 2 Years Later, 2008 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 21-1/4 x 25-1/2 inches (framed) 54 x 65 cm JL043 Blind Image #141, 2007 acrylic and canvas on plexiglas 45 x 57-1/2 inches 114 x 146 cm JL020 Big Bang #3, 2007, acrylic on canvas and plexiglas, 12 parts, each part: 21-1/4 x 25- 1/2 in, 54 x 65 cm; 65-1/4 x 104-3/4 inches, 160 x 266 cm (overall framed), JL034 Blind Image #139, 2007 acrylic and canvas on plexiglas 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 inches 200 x 200 cm JL022 Blind Image #152, 2007 acrylic and canvas, enamel under plexiglas 26 x 33-1/2 inches (framed) 66 x 85 cm JL035 Blind Image #153, 2007 acrylic and canvas, enamel under plexiglas 26 x 33-1/2 inches (framed) 66 x 85 cm JL036 Blind Drawing #27, 2007 graphite and acrylic on paper 25-1/4 x 32-3/4 inches 64 x 83 cm JL032 Fujitsu Plasma #2, 2006 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 32-1/4 x 57-1/2 inches (framed) 82 x 146 cm JL027 Blind Image #120, 2006 acrylic on canvas and plexiglass 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 x 2-1/2 inches 200 x 200 x 6.5 cm JL005 Blind Image #114, 2006 acrylic on canvas and plexiglass 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 x 2-1/2 inches 200 x 200 x 6.5 cm JL002 ADDITIONAL WORKS (To request pricing information, please click on a description): From Left to Right #07 (Mermaids), 2016 acrylic on plexiglass overall installation: 47-1/2 x 95 inches, 120.5 x 241 cm each panel: 47-1/2 x 47-1/2, 120.5 x 120.5 JL056 Clockwise from Above #04, 2015 acrylic paint and plexiglass 76-3/4 x 102-1/2 inches 195 x 260 cm JL053 Cover #08 Leaves of Grass, Walt Withman, 2014 acrylic on raw canvas 64-1/2 x 80-1/4 inches 164 x 204 cm, framed JL062 Site Scene #12, 2008 acrylic on 400g Arches paper and silkscreen print 67-3/8 x 52 inches 171 x 132 cm, framed JL061 Le Mepris #02, 2008 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 39-1/4 x 32 inches (framed) 100 x 81 cm JL040 9 Months Later, 2008 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 21-1/4 x 25-1/2 inches (framed) 54 x 65 cm JL042 2 Years Later, 2008 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 21-1/4 x 25-1/2 inches (framed) 54 x 65 cm JL043 Blind Image #141, 2007 acrylic and canvas on plexiglas 45 x 57-1/2 inches 114 x 146 cm JL020 Big Bang #3, 2007 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 65-1/4 x 104-3/4 inches (framed) 160 x 266 cm (12 parts each part 21-1/4 x 25- 1/2 in) (12 parts each part 54 x 65 cm) JL034 Blind Image #139, 2007 acrylic and canvas on plexiglas 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 inches 200 x 200 cm JL022 ADDITIONAL WORKS (To request pricing information, please click on a description): Blind Image #138, 2007 acrylic and canvas on plexiglas 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 inches 200 x 200 cm JL024 Blind Drawing #28, 2007 graphite and acrylic on paper 25-1/4 x 32-3/4 inches 64 x 83 cm JL033 Blind Image #152, 2007 acrylic and canvas, enamel under plexiglas 26 x 33-1/2 inches (framed) 66 x 85 cm JL035 Blind Image #153, 2007 acrylic and canvas, enamel under plexiglas 26 x 33-1/2 inches (framed) 66 x 85 cm JL036 Blind Drawing #27, 2007 graphite and acrylic on paper 25-1/4 x 32-3/4 inches 64 x 83 cm JL032 Blind Image #114, 2006 acrylic on canvas and plexiglass 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 x 2-1/2 inches 200 x 200 x 6.5 cm JL002 Blind Image #120, 2006 acrylic on canvas and plexiglass 78-3/4 x 78-3/4 x 2-1/2 inches 200 x 200 x 6.5 cm JL005 Fujitsu Plasma #2, 2006 acrylic on canvas and plexiglas 32-1/4 x 57-1/2 inches (framed) 82 x 146 cm JL027 Smuggling references João Louro's visual strategy, which has questioned the relationship between languages, references (literary, cinematic, musical and theoretical) and proposes that the action of "smuggling" has multiple meanings, allowing the observation of dense layers of cultural production. The curator Ana Cristina Cachola states: Smuggling, Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Elvas (MACE), Portugal, 2015 The work of João Louro has a constellation-like predisposition, scattered references, techniques, languages and different supports, and yet, aggregate, very clearly and cohesively, around the same visual program: the work of art as a form of knowledge pierced by the culture of work...In this sense, the artistic validity of his works is accompanied by an epistemic validity embodying an ethical and an aesthetic of the images they produce the world. "Smuggling" is an exhibition-revelation because it shows not only the various locations that make up this constellation, ie, it works as an individual, but the way they relate to each other: through a smuggling languages and meanings; exchanges, correspondence, questions, rebuttals paths that run through dense at times illicit hidden because heuristics conventions. Installation views, Travessa da Ermida, Belém, Lisbon, Portugal, 2014 LA Confidential, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA, 2008 For LA Confidential at Christopher Grimes Gallery, Louro presents new work utilizing architectural drawings of the sites where movies were filmed, which are presented in connection to the dialogue spoken in that location. One large-scale piece, with several panels (76” x 76” each) will represent LAX International Airport where James Bond arrives during the end of the movie “Diamonds Are Forever.” Other locations and movies Louro explores include: The Elrod House, Palm Springs, in “Diamonds are Forever;” Richard Neutra’s Lovell House, Los Angeles, in “LA Confidential;” the Libera and Malaparte House, Capri in “Le Mépris;” and John Lautner’s, Malin House, Los Angeles in “Body Double.” In many ways, Louro is casting the spectators, by presenting them with dialogue and the conceptual space to perform. Louro studied architecture at the University of Lisbon and then, painting at the Arco School of Visual Art. He came into prominence in the Portuguese and international art scene in the 1990’s both through solo and collaborative endeavors, following the conceptual and minimalist practices of the 1970’s. Yet he defines himself in opposition to them. The result is a relationship to the finished object that goes beyond art historical references and uses language and image as his tools. He does not confine himself to a single medium; taking ideas as a starting point, he uses painting, sculpture, photography, drawing as well as film, selecting media as an architect selects the team that constructs his vision. Text also plays an integral role in his work, mainly for its ability to conjure up images in the mind of the viewer. João Louro came into prominence in the Portuguese and international art scene in the 1990’s both through his solo work as well as through a series of collaborative endeavors. Louro has been experimenting first and foremost with ideas that relate to his two primary subjects: language and images. Louro’s works can be loosely defined as following on the heels of 1970’s conceptual art endeavors or minimalist practices in the theatrical sense. However, he defines himself in opposition to them and his relationship to the finished object is one that goes beyond art historical references. He refuses to be confined to a single medium; taking ideas as a starting point he is at home using painting, sculpture, photography, drawing as well as film, selecting media as an director selects the musicians for his orchestra. PLAY, REC and Pause, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA, 2006 Following an intense blending of references from Warhol to the Situationists and from Kosuth to Wittgenstein, Louro has used and subverted dictionary definitions since the mid 1990s in a series entitled Historia do Crime (The History of Crime). Between 2001 and 2004, using words as a departure point, he created a series of very amusing large-scale neon and steel sign installations under the title Linguagem (Language). Working with traffic sign systems and blending cognoscenti references to art, art history, the history of philosophy as well as those of literature and poetry, Louro created a steel panel series under the loose title of Dead End. In that same period he also produced his Blind Images. In them he approaches the realm of the images (movies, newspapers, magazines) through painting. To do so Louro uses captions that refer to an obliterated, missing image that plays with the spectator’s capacity to reconstruct the image based on the text. For his upcoming show at Christopher Grimes Gallery, Louro will present new works based on The History of Crime, Blind Image and the Phantomgraph series using the film as his subject matter. Friday, May 2, 2008 By Christopher Knight Selected Solo Exhibitions 2016 Museu de Arte de Rio, Brazil (forthcoming) The Bermuda Triangle, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA 2015 Smuggling, Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Elvas, Portugal I Will Be Your Mirror: poems and problems, Portuguese Pavilion, 56th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy 2014 The Cold Man, Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisbon, Portugal 5 Minutes After Violent Death, Travessa da Ermida, Belém, Lisbon, Portugal 2013 Boy Meets Girl, Girl Meets Boy, Solar, Galeria de Arte Cinemática, Vila do Conde, Portugal Do Desaparecimento, Blind Images, Phantomgraphs e Subtitles, Antigo Edifício CTT, Castelo Branco, Portugal L’Écriture Du Désatre, Fernando Santos Gallery, Porto, Portugal The Return of the Real 20 - João Louro, Museu Do Neorealismo, Vila Franca de Xira, Portugal RUSH, Museu do Caramulo, Portugal 2012 The Return of the Real 20 - João Louro, Museu do Neorealismo, Vila Franca de Xira, Portugal 2011 Grand Prix, Galeria Fernando Santos, Portugal Le Plateau, Paris, France Joao Louro: In God We Trust, BES Arte & Financa, Lisboa, Portugal Joao Louro, Galeria Cinematica, Vila do Conde, Portugal João Louro, If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change, Appleton Square, Lisbon, Portugal Smoke and Mirrors, Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisbon, Portugal 2010 The Great Houdini, Centro de Arte Contemporânea Graça Morais, Bragança, Portugal My Dark Places, Museo d’Art Contemporanea, Rome, Italy 2009 The Hustler, Centro de Artes Visuais, Coimbra, Portugal Running with Bonnie & Clyde, Museu do Caramulo, Portugal 2008 L.A. Confidential, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Galeria Fernando Santos. Lisbon, Portugal 2007 BIG BANG, Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisbon, Portugal 2006 PLAY, REC and PAUSE, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA Racont e- moi une histoire…, Galerie Baumet Sultana, Paris, France 2005 Naked Drawings, Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisbon 2004 Blind Runner, Centro Cultural de Belém, Lisbon 2001 Epicentro, Estudo sobre a Origem das Línguas, Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisbon La Pensée et l’Erreur, (curated by Ferran Barenblit), Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona, Spain Love Scenes, Círculo de Artes Plásticas de Coimbra (ECO.), Coimbra, Portugal Aplauso, Ensaio sobre os Dados Imediatos da Consciência, Serralves Foundation / Silo Cultural Space, Oporto, Portugal 2000 Runaway Car Crashed #2, (curated by João Fernandes), Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art (MACS), Oporto, Portugal 1999 Run Away Car Crashed #1, Cultural Centre of São Paulo (CCSP), São Paulo, Brazil 1998 Eye of the Devil, Ceramics Museum, Caldas da Raínha, Portugal Air Bag, The Return of the Real, (ECO.), National Museum of Contemporary Art, Museu do Chiado, Lisbon., Portugal Diamond Shine, Círculo de Artes Plásticas de Coimbra (ECO.), Coimbra, Portugal 1996 Tokyosony Wonder Museum, Galeria Graça Fonseca, Lisbon, Portugal 1994 I do what happens, Galeria Graça Fonseca, Lisbon Portugal 1993 Sin Servir a su Majestad, Epai Pascual Lucas, Valencia, Spain 1991 King & Kong o que Aconteceu ao Niilismo?, Biblioteca Nacional, Lisbon, Portugal Selected Group Exhibitions 2016 Museum of Music, Phiharmonie de Paris, France (forthcoming) PUNK. Sus rastros en la creación contemporánea, Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona, (MACBA), Spain 2015 Elective Affinities: Julião Sarmento, Collector, Museu de Electricidade, Lisbon, Portugal PUNK. Sus rastros en la creación contemporánea, Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo, Mostoles, Spain Galeria Fernando Santos, Porto, Portugal Horizonte de Proximidades. Uma topologia a partir da Coleção António Cachola, Arquipélago Centro de Artes Contemporâneas, Açores, Portugal 2014 Mercadoria Chinesa, Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisboa, Portugal Obras da Coleção António Cachola, Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Elvas, Portugal 2013 FILM - Solar, Galeria de Arte Cinemática, Vila do Conde, Portugal SINCRONIAS: Portuguese Artists in Collection António Cachola, Museo Extremeño e Iberoamericano de Arte Contemporáneo MEIAC, Badajoz Trienal no Alentejo, Lisbon, Portugal 93, Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela, Spain Through the looking glass, Galeria Fernando Santos - 20 Anos (1993-2013), Galeria Fernando Santos Porto, Oporto Forbidden Zone, Artistic intervention at Casal Ventoso, Lisbon More Young Americans, L’Enclos des Bernasdins, Hôtel de Miramion, Paris, France Do desaparecimento, Blind images, Phantomgraphs and Subtitles, former CTT building, Castelo Branco, Portugal Territórios de Transição #11: A Experiência do Silêncio, BES Arte e Finança, Lisbon 2012 Monocromo, Rosón Arte Contemporáneo, Pontevedra Riso / Laughter, Museu da Electricidade, Lisbon, Portugal Premio Bienal de Fotografía Purificación García 2012, Museo de Pontevedra, Pontevedra 100 Artworks, 10 Years: A Selection from the PLMJ Foundation Collection, Fundação Arpad Szenes, Vieira da Silva, Lisbon, Portugal Contested Territories, Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Programs (DGCP), New York City, NY Premio Bienal de Fotografía Purificación García 2012, DA2, Domus Artium 2002, Salamanca CONCURSO DE FOTOGRAFÍA PURIFICACIÓN GARCÍA 2012, Círculo de Bellas Artes de Madrid (CBA), Madrid O Castelo em 3 partes: Assalto, Destruição e Reconstrução, Guimãres 2012, Capital Europeia da Cultura, Portugal. Curated by Paulo Cunha e Silva. 2011 En Obras, Arte Y Arquitectura en la Colección Teixeira de Freitas, Tenerife Espacio de las Artes, Canárias, Spain Stories of Material Life, Visual Arts Center of Cáceres, Helga de Alver Foundation, Cáceres, Spain. Curated by Delfim Sardo. O Museu em Ruínas, Museum of Contemporary Art of Elvas, Portugal 2010 Look Up! Natural Porto Art Show: Olhares Mutilados, Atelier Paulo Lobo., Porto, Portugal. Curated by David Barro (cat) A Culpa Nao E Minha – Coleccao Antonio Cachola, Berardo Collection Museum, Lisboa, Portugal Like Tears in Rain, Palácio das Artes, Fábrica de Talentos, Porto, Portugal 2 De Copas, Vera Cortês Agência de Arte e Galeria Vermelho, São Paulo, Brazil 2009 Colecção Serralves 2009, MACS – Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Serralves, Oporto, Portugal 30th Anniversary Exhibition, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA More Songs about Images, Voyeur Project View, Lisbon, Portugal Garbage Pin Project, MCO Arte Contemporânea, Oporto, Portugal 2008 No Room, curated by Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee, Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA Parangole, Fragmentos desde los Noventa en Espana, Portugal y Brasil, Museo Patio Hereriano de Valladolid, Spain In the Beginning, Mandeville Center, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA 2006 Personal Views: Regarding Private Art Collections in San Diego, San Diego Museum of Art 2005 O contrato social, Museu Bordalo Pinheiro, Lisbon Romance [a novel] (curated by Adriano Pedrosa), Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisbon Insite 05 — Art Practices in Public Domain, S. Diego/Tijuana 51st International Art — La Biennale di Venezia, The Experience of Art (curated by Maria de Corral), Venice Le Marathons des Mots, Toulouse 2003 Into the Breach (curated by Thomas Peutz), Smart Project Space, Amsterdan, The Netherlands Liste Basel 03, Smart Project Space, Basel, Switzerland 2002 EAST International (curated by Lawrence Weiner and Jack Wendler) Miami Basel 02 Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Miami, U.S.A. 2001 Confronto + Mistura, (curated by Ricardo Basbaun), Power-Station of Freixo, Oporto, Portugal UrbanLab, (curated by Paulo Mendes), Maia Bienalle, Maia, Portugal Colecção Banco Privado, (curated by João Fernandes), Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art (MACS), Oporto, Portugal 2000 More Works about Buildings and Food (ECO.), (curated by Pedro Lapa), Oeiras Foundry, Oeiras, Portugal Portuguese Contemporary Art, Glasgow, Scotland XXVI Bienal de Pontevedra (ECO.), (curated by Maria Corral and Miguel Perez), Galiza, Spain 1999 Ruído, Cesar Galeria, Lisbon, Portugal 1998 Read my Lips all Guilty, Centro Cultual de Belém, Lisbon, Portugal Read my Lips all Guilty, 6ème Biennale International du Film sur l’Art, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France 1997 Ecos de la Materia, Museu Estremeño e Iberoamericano de Arte Contemporanêa (MEIAC), Badajoz, Spain ICTM 97, Palácio Galveias, Lisbon, Portugal Ecos de la Matéria 2, Sala de las Atarazanas, Valencia, Spain Ex. Mater, Museu Estremeño e Iberoamericano de Arte Contemporanêa (MEIAC), Badajoz, Spain Art Attack, Galeria ZBD, Lisbon, Portugal 2006 Ramos., Filipa. “A Blind Interview,” Nero Magazine. 1996 Manifesta 96, Roterdam, Netherlands 1999 Lapa, Pedro. “Painting was my first Love,” Ibiden. Xerox After Violent Death. 1995 Espectáculo, Disseminação, Deriva e Exílio? Um projecto em torno de Guy Debord, Metalurgica de Beja, Beja, Portugal Peninsulares, Galeria Tomas March, Valencia, Spain Espai Antoni Estrany, Barcelona, Spain 40ème Salon de Montrouge, Montrouge, Paris, France 1994 Imagens para os anos 90, Museu de Arte Conemporânea de Serralves, Oporto and Culturgest, Lisbon, Portugal Fet e Europa, Portugal, Centre Cultural d’Alcoi, Spain 1993 Made in Portugal, Galeria Graça Fonseca, Lisbon, Portugal 1991 V Bienal dos Jovens do Mediterrâneo, Marseille, France Selected Bibiography 2015 Corral, María de. “Those Ideas that are Words,” I Will Be Your Mirror, exhibition catalog. Crespo, Nuno. “Physiology and the Politics of Pictures,” I Will Be Your Mirror, exhibition catalog. Sardo, Delfim. “Melancholy,” I Will Be Your Mirror, exhibition catalog. Herkenoff, Paulo. “(João Louro, Desire and Stain)” I Will Be Your Mirror, exhibition catalog. 2010 Costa, Jorge. “The Great Houdini,” in The Great Houdini, Contemporary Art Center of Bragança, exhibition catalog. 2009 Amado, Miguel. “The Image Hunter,” The Hustler, Centro Artes Visuais de Coimbra. 2008 Grau, Carolina. “Conversation with João Louro,” João Louro, Fernando Santos Gallery. 2007 Crespo, Nuno. “Words, Images and Paradox,” Art Papers. 2005 Herkenhoff, Paulo. “#66, Louro, 51,” International Art Exhibition - La Biennale de Venezia, exhibition catalog. Collections Aberdeen Art Galleries & Museums, Aberdeen, Reino Unido Câmara Municipal do Porto, Portugal Coleção BES, Lisbon, Portugal Coleção António Cachola, Elvas, Portugal Collección Helga de Alvear, Cáceres, Spain Collección Purificación Garcia, Madrid, Spain Fundaçao Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, Portugal Fundação PLMJ, Lisbon, Portugal Fundação EDP, Lisbon, Portugal Fundação de Serrales, Oporto, Portugal Fundación ARCO, Madrid, Spain Jumex Foundation, México City Leal Rios Collection, Lisbon, Portugal Margulies Collection at the Warehouse, Miami MACRO Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rome Museu de Arte do Rio, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Museu do Caramulo, Portugal
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