Der Sturm (dwnld)

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This is the exhibition catalogue edited during the Museum show from photographer Lucia Adverse in 2013. The exhibition was held at Inimá de Paula Museum of Belo Horizonte (MIP) Brazil and it got a large number of visitors breaking the visit record of the Museum at the date.

In English & em português. 44 pages.

Downloadable catalogue.

Read more about the artist.

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Item Description

This downloadable catalogue includes the artworks from the exhibition held at the Museu Inimá de Paula (MIP), Belo Horizonte, Brazil, 2014, . Curator and scenography Ricardo Fernandes, critic Pascale Lismonde.

“Lucia Adverse and the film ‘Metropolis’.

I watched this masterpiece again. To my surprise Lucia Adverse’s ‘Der Sturm’ series seems to be the urban universe of ‘Metropolis’ incarnate, as if, in modern Berlin, she really had found the buildings of the city designed by Fritz Lang nearly a century ago, as in a future visitation of those chosen for 2026, constructed day and night by robotic and completely servile workers. In Lucia Adverse’s photographs there also arise these enormous buildings with rectangular cavities, side by side, totally dark, sometimes vertical, sometimes horizontal. It’s as if the science fiction city had taken modern concrete form in Berlin, exactly as Fritz Lang imagined it.

However, on closer observation of the photography, ‘Metropolis’ appears more as a reference, a point of departure for her exploratory work, different from what Lucia Adverse presents to us, which is not really a vertical urban area where twin-engine planes fly around, but rather, isolated edifices or fragments of architecture, photographed one by one.

The twenty-three photographs of ‘Der Sturm’ really reveal a sampling of the urban history of Berlin in all its moments of local architecture, especially because the artist shows us not the prestigious architecture of the city’s most well-known buildings, but the everyday buildings, offices, ordinary houses or simple dwellings. A small ancient house with walls covered in ivy and a tree in the yard, a large façade with post baroque details, a popular construction in the modernist Bauhaus 1930’s style with its architectural entrance, an erstwhile town hall or Jewish commune featuring a gateway with four small lateral domes, a series of modern concrete facades, factories or office buildings typical of the last decades of the 20th century, and of course the above mentioned building of fifteen floors and its spectacular immensity.” (extract from the critic by Pascale Lismonde)