This fair started spontaneously at Praça da Batalha where handmade products (costume jewellery, wallets, among others) were sold. In the 90's the Porto City Hall regulated this activity, though the creation of Batalha Handcraft Fair.
The city of Porto hosts another edition of ITF Future Series Wheelchair International Tournament, a competition that will bring together some of the main names in the sport's world hierarchy. The tournament, which will once again be played on the courts of Clube de Ténis do Porto, will feature leading figures like Austrian Nicolas Langmann, currently 34th in the world ranking, Brazilian Gustavo Carneiro, 37th on the list, and the Dutch Carlos Anker, 38th. Experienced Italian tennis players Luca Arca and Silviu Culea, as well as Greek Stafanos Diamantis or Frenchman Nicolas Charrier, are also confirmed. The national representation will be done by the main players in Portugal, such as Jean Paul Melo, 131th of the world list, also Carlos Leitão, currently 136th, and João Couceiro, 272nd. Given the circumstances related to the pandemic, and since the draw only consists of 16 players, the Portuguese Francisco Aguiar and José Sousa are, for now, as substitutes, and can be summoned if any of the registered tennis players is unable to travel to our country.
R. H. Quaytman employs mechanical reproduction techniques and conceptual art traditions to create closed series of works divided into chapters. Subsequent parts are numbered to mark the passage of time and gradually completing life and artistic project. The artist treats all exhibitions and paintings presented as one creative undertaking. R. H. Quaytman approaches painting as if it were poetry: when reading a poem, one notices specific words, we realise that each word has a resonance. Quaytman's paintings, organised into chapters structured like a book, have grammar, syntax and vocabulary. While the work is delimited by a rigid structure on a material level - they appear only in bevelled plywood panels in eight predetermined sizes derived from the golden ratio - the open-ended content creates permutations that result in an endless archive. Quaytman's practice engages three distinct stylistic modes: silkscreen based on photographs, optical patterns such as moiré and scintillating grids, and small hand-painted oil works. Quaytman's work, presented for the first time in Portugal, points to the new possibilities of today's painting. What is a painting, an icon? What are the means of painting in a culture saturated by visual stimulation, from photography to the digital forest of signs? Is painting still a relevant medium to share our story? The exhibition is co-organised by Muzeum Sztuki in Lódz, Poland, and by Fundação de Serralves – Museu de Arte Contemporânea, Porto. Curated by Jaroslaw Suchan
Specifically conceived for the Contemporary Gallery, Hugo Canoilas' first exhibition (Lisbon, 1977) at the Serralves Museum is both a confirmation and expansion some core concerns in his practice: a speculative approach to the relationship between art and reality (social and political events), a questioning of the characteristics and boundaries of painting, and the emphasis given to collaborative work. With a background in painting, Canoilas has been examining the place of this artistic medium, how it is perceived both by museum visitors and passers-by (the artist is known for public space interventions which are never advertised as works of art). In the case of this exhibition at Serralves, Canoilas dispensed with the place where paintings are most expected to be found - the gallery walls - and decides to intervene on the floor, skirting board and ceiling of the Contemporary Gallery - spaces neglected by most painting exhibitions. On the floor there are three coloured glass pieces that represent jellyfish. Made in Marinha Grande, these jellyfish - possible symbols of climate warming, but also of such ideas as formlessness and metamorphosis on which several works by Hugo Canoilas are based – are meant to be stepped on by visitors. The main role given to the floor is confirmed by the skirting board-painting (a light box, featuring a painting on linen stretched like a canvas, delimiting the space of the exhibition), in which the artist draws attention to an architectural element that is as common as it is unnoticed. On the gallery ceiling, Hugo Canoilas will create a gestural painting that, like his most recent abstract paintings, is based on images of the seabed’s flora and fauna. It should be noted that the painting also functions as a lightbox that creates an aura in the room, affecting the perception of the jellyfish. Jellyfish are fascinating animals that, throughout their unusual life cycles undergo various metamorphoses and reproduce cells in unusual ways. His observation, which witnesses dramatic variations in configuration, defies all notions of stability and all ideas on the relationship between the parts and the whole. Just like this exhibition by Hugo Canoilas, comprised of three distinct elements - floor, skirting board and ceiling - that influence one another (in cooperation, symbiosis, competition, predation and parasitism) and which is an embodiment of an artistic practice that does not crystallize in a form, but which constantly question themselves about its own limits, functions and assumptions.
The Mercado da Ribeira consists of 10 stores, and was created after the renovation of the old market. Food products in its traditional form, tourist products and restaurants. Location: Cais da Ribeira (near the north pillar of Luiz I Bridge).
What happens when three friends, like César Mourão, Miguel Araújo and António Zambujo, decide to go together on vacation to the Algarve? Conversation after conversation, guitar after guitar, improvisation generates improvisation. Being fans of each other for a long time, when suddenly, they were creating and improvising songs together, with no other intention than to have fun. And so, it was. The good memories of those days led us to want to share these moments of complicity with the audience. They then decided to invite Luísa Sobral, herself a very peculiar improviser, to whom they are devoted fans and friends, to join them. The result? A magnificent Disarray (Desconcerto) of music and good humour, created a la minute, absolutely improvised, absolutely unmissable, that will surprise them as much as the audience, and that might be even better than going on vacation with them.