Palácio

Paulo Climachasuka

From May 09 to Jun 30 2005

In recent years, Climachauska's work has been developed as a pictographic exercise, characterised by an obsessive, repetitive operation that welcomes the persistence of a forced stability due to the calculations of the occupation carried out on absolute flat surfaces such as formica, transparent glas,s or museum walls, displaying references that are related to a certain stage of self-representation in Brazilian art occurring within the context of the late 1990s.

The graphic layout of the work presented by the artist at the 26th São Paulo Biennial consisted of a mirrored projection of the diagram of the Biennial building in a life-size, 1:1 scale. The artist was, thus, seeking to reiterate the symbolic appropriation of the ?house of art?, as if the specular projection of the diagram would encompass and contain the existing threat regarding its permanence. Therefore, it was very important to mark the play of stability by means of a line formed by numbers, albeit constantly concerned with establishing relations of representational equality between the image and its referent. This operation plays with the desire of modernity in Brazilian art to be equal to itself, that is, to the extent of its adequate reproduction.

The current subtraction work carried out by Paulo Climachauska is engaged in delimitating the attainment of any excess by retraction, making use of a graphic borderline stripe designed to retain the figure composed by the enchained succession of numbers, whose purpose can be none other than that of covering up the impossibility of retaining the un-representable excess of reality. There is no surplus at the image level.

The dread of trespassing the limit, the boundary that, as a formal attribute, defines this work, drives the artist to a precise and strict handling of the representable chain of flows that nullify one another. Nonetheless, every subtraction operation leaves behind the graphic imprint of their existence, thus creating a sort of ground zero of the energy field that destabilizes the idea of some possible affiliation.

In this field of extreme visual prophylaxis, affiliation lies essentially in the representation of its origins and in the layout of the voids. At a distance of a few meters, what we see is a blurred line. However, when we get closer, the distinctness of the numbers appears as the representation of a suture.

In brief, what is impossible to be attained in the plane of economic reality seems to be at least configured in the parodist representation of its possibility. Is economy concerned with reality, whereas art is only concerned with the symbolic? Certainly not, for ?this? reality is supported by a symbolic economy that affects the very idea of fetish ascribed to merchandises and consumer goods and, in the field of visualisation, the dread of any excess is anchored to the fear of visibility ? not of the objects, but of the processes of reproduction.

Hence, the need to curb the numbers as if, by dint of this manoeuvre, it would be possible to balance what cannot be stabilised. The repetitive numeral ?graphemes? follow the lines of some of the emblematic structures of Brazilian modernist architecture. Only one of the lines formed by the enchainment of subtraction operations (as in a school textbook) reproduces the diagram in a perspective that is self-exhausting in its ornamental drive.

The work represented at the São Paulo Biennial had to have its physical counterpart, and what it has gained in materiality was obtained through material subtraction. The work was reduced to transportable fragments capable of being fixated on walls for the sake of meeting the methodological requirement of displaying the scale dimension of its reductive transfer. This is the radical reach of its Pompeian quality that, by means of a dislocation effect, provides the visibility of the ruins with the possibility of reconstructing what?s missing in history.

Justo Pastor Mellado