For the first time, the special exhibition LEONARDO DA VINCI - Man - Inventor - Artist, THE GENIUS, presents a large number of his inventions, such as his machines, meticulously reconstructed on the basis of original sketches from various Codices and built with the materials available in his time: wood, fabric, rope and metal. The computer simulations, which were developed with the Vienna University of Applied Arts, explain the relationship between the original sketches and the 3-dimensional models, the primary way of working, and the improvements of other inventions. Most of the models are interactive. Despite the few paintings he produced, Leonardo's paintings are among the most famous in the world. Not only today but already in his time, some of his paintings were true attractions and were copied by many artists. This exhibition combines a chronological presentation and a comparison of all his paintings in one place and in original dimensions. The fascination of digital replicas consists in the reconstruction of the paintings, in terms of the probable original state with regards to the depth of colour and integrity, and the interesting journeys over more than 500 years of history
This exhibition brings together about 200 objects such as paintings, documents, sheet music, coins or weaponry that serve as pieces of historical importance and which arrive from various national and foreign institutions. At the same time, it is also sustainable, as the materials used are ecological, free of plastics and pollutants. Promoted by the Porto City Hall, this exhibition has the scientific support of CITCEM (Interdisciplinary Centre "Culture, Space and Memory") of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Porto (FLUP) and is curated by Professor Conceição Meireles Pereira of the Department of History and Political and International Studies of the University of Porto. Among the themes covered are the arrival of the Court to Brazil, the Siege of Porto, the independence of Brazil and the return of the monarch to the city. This exhibition also aims to "evoke the role of D. Pedro (I of Brazil and IV of Portugal) in the independence of the Brazilian nation, in the triumph of the liberal cause, as well as the close relationship he had with the city of Porto". Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
The title of the exhibition marking the centenary of Agustina Bessa-Luís (1922–2019) evokes the name of a film by the director with whom the writer maintained a regular and fruitful collaboration: “Um Filme Falado” [A Talking Picture] (2003) by Manoel de Oliveira. The starting point of the exhibition were the books “Aforismos” (1988), “Contemplação Carinhosa da Angústia” (2000), “Dicionário Imperfeito” (book published in 2008 that brings together excerpts from texts arranged in alphabetical order) and “Ensaios e Artigos” (1951–2007) (2017), which cover a wide range of subjects, themes and personalities. While reading these volumes – which both in terms of form and content can be understood as true revelations of Agustina's world – some of the writer's key ideas were identified. These themes are the entries for this “dictionary-exhibition”, each creating a dialogue with works from the Serralves Collection, by Portuguese and foreign artists, some of whom were her contemporaries. The aim is to create unexpected synapses, reverberations, between selected pieces and words, expanding their respective meanings and possible interpretations. The exhibition, which is to be read as much as to be seen, is presented as a three-dimensional book.
Station 1 reveals the history of absence, rather than the history of presence. Fragments and further fragments are used to narrate moments that indicate the existence of the current and previous epochs. Materials from different periods coexist with audiovisual devices and different types of image, to show us how PortuCale - the city that gave Portugal its name - became Porto.
METAMORFOSES focuses on the profusion and the process of integration of the imaginary and the vegetal, mineral and animal themes in a romantic domestic space, bringing to the halls of the house of Quinta da Macieirinha several pieces, some previously exhibited in the former Romantic Museum and other spaces of Museu da Cidade, others never exhibited, showing the unquestionable quality and diversity of the municipal collections. This exhibition also marks the beginning of the evocation of the centenary of the death of Porto artist, Aurélia de Souza, a key moment of the 2022/2023 programme. The celebrated self-portrait of the artist as “Santo António” (Saint Anthony), made around 1902, will be part of the new collection that brings together paintings, furniture, tapestries and textiles, ceramics, crockery and silverware, as well as other surprising sections of the collection, such as sets of fans, cut-out papers and malacology.
This exhibition, the artist's first solo show in Portugal, is centred around her most recent film – “Eu sou uma arara” [I am a macaw] (2022) – which will have its first ever premiere in Serralves. Made in collaboration with filmmaker Mariana Lacerda, this medium-length film is a critical reflection on the impact of deforestation in the Amazon upon its indigenous peoples at a time of political and social tension. This work is also the result of a long period of research and a series of actions in São Paulo where dozens of figures inspired by Brazilian fauna and flora were paraded through the city's streets, like a dense and powerful forest. Heir to the historical legacy of the post-war avant-garde movements, from neo-concrete to tropicália, Rivane Neuenschwander (b. 1967) is one of the most renowned names in Brazilian contemporary art. In her work, the artist combines different media and mediums to build a unique visual repertoire that explores narratives on a wide range of themes, including language and time, popular culture and literature, psychoanalysis and art, nature and society, politics and philosophy, fear and desire. One of her most iconic works, “Eu desejo o seu desejo” [I wish your wish] (2003), a collection of wishes reminiscent of the wish ribbons/bracelets of Senhor do Bonfim, will be placed in the Chapel of Serralves Villa.
Cindy Sherman: Metamorphosis presents a series of works that span the artist's career from her earliest work to her most recent works. The exhibition was organized in dialogue with the artist and in partnership with The Broad Art Foundation, Los Angeles, an institution that has collected in depth Cindy Sherman's work for over thirty years. Mainly known for photographs in which she portrays herself as her own model, embodying the role of female media-influenced stereotypes in a wide range of personas and environments, Cindy Sherman shoots alone in her studio, serving as artistic director, photographer, makeup artist, hairdresser and subject. The portrait practice she began decades ago is responsible for some of the most striking and influential images in contemporary art. For this ambitious presentation in Serralves, the museum's galleries will undergo a radical transformation, creating a theatrical set to host the storyboard that the artist's photographs make up. The exhibition will also include new work, especially created for the Serralves Museum: a large photographic mural, which will give the exhibition an additional uniqueness. Generally, the artist does not give titles to her works, trying to avoid preconceived interpretations or pre-interpretations that could influence the viewer, preferring to leave the construction of the stories to the discretion of each person. The images are, however, grouped in series and numbered and explore various themes and techniques, thus reinforcing the differentiation and classification: Untitled Film Still (1983-1984), Fashion (1983-84), Bus Rider (1976-2000), The Fairy Tales (1985), The Disasters (1986-89), The Historical Portraits (1988-90) , Sex Pictures (1992), Horror and Surrealistic Pictures (1994), Masks (1995), Broken Dolls (1999), The Hollywood/Hampton Ladies Portraits (2000), The Clowns (2003-05), Society (2008). In the exhibition in Serralves, these series are presented with no chronological order, but rather building a narrative. In Sherman's works, individual compositions and narratives refer to a complete and complex repertoire of female identities: but while the early works are full of visible emotions, in the later photographs the emotions are gradually excluded. The works are not self-portraits, but representations perfected by the distance from the camera or lens that captures them or, as Rosalind Krauss said, they are “a copy without actually having an original”. In the late 1980s, Sherman felt the need to suppress her presence and created unreal and grotesque images, accident scenes, made up of supernatural and terrifying characters who embodied irrational fears and nightmares and created macabre and repulsive settings. Gradually, the artist's body is replaced by fake breasts, human excrescences, bodily fluids, sexual debris, medical prostheses, which later gave rise to Sex Pictures (1992), one of her most daring series, in which Sherman arranges mannequins into pseudo-pornographic tableaux, deliberately un-erotic that challenge the porn industry standards. The artist's return to the centre of the image took place around 2000 with the series Head Shots, where she features a series of studio portraits, or the disturbing series Clowns (2003-05) and, later, images of elderly women. If the fake or artificial body parts force the viewer to confront the staged aspect of the work, the tragic and vulgar appearance of the characters compels him to feel a certain empathy and respect for them. On the other hand, there is an evident change in the positioning of the camera, in the alteration of the sets, in the saturation and overlapping of props and extraneous elements in the composition, as well as the size of the print. Later, in the Society series (2008), Sherman continues her exploration into distorted ideals of beauty, self-image and aging in a society obsessed with youth and status through characters set in sumptuous backgrounds and presenting these photographs in ornate frames. Sherman goes from analogue to digital and, like her characters, she experiments with various possibilities: truly natural settings in her first images, film techniques such as “rear projection”, studio photography (the place where she has greater control over the image construction), the cyclorama and finally construction images on digital backgrounds. Although her work is generally classified by critics and theorists as being associated with feminism, violence and voyeurism and focusing on representation, the artist herself tends to avoid this theoretical instrumentalization and such associations. When building a character, Sherman does not have a specific person in mind but a genre, and the complexity of the narrative is shaped in the specificity of the relationship between the setting and the character.
With a reflective and singular career, Vera Mota (Porto, 1982) has been developing her work around the politics of the body, promoting and weighting its participation as a generative methodology and axis for conceptual formulations. Resorting mainly to sculpture, drawing and performance, and thus taking advantage of the breadth and permeability that these disciplines offer, her artistic practice involves a strong material component. In the work of Vera Mota, performance emerges as a means of production, composition or even staging, in a process where the body as the almost always indispensable agent, imprinting its gestures and circulations. The artist pays special attention to the economy of presence, effort and action, the artist proposes successive exercises of repositioning of the body, sometimes subjecting it to processes of almost complete erosion of its characteristics. Assuming a sculptural animism and claiming other perspectives of the body and materiality, Vera Mota reassesses modes of representation, proposing processes and strategies of disqualification, transfer or transfiguration of forms, status or functions, among bodies or the parts that compose them. DISEMBODIED is the artist's first exhibition in a museum - as if from the hands to the head - proposes a permanent and tense dialogue between drawing and sculpture, in which the spectators find themselves involved.
“Who tells a tale adds a tail’” is a proverb used to indicate that a story is added to with each telling, i.e., people add their own details to their account of the very same event or fact. “Story telling” is one of the expressions that best define the oeuvre of artist Paula Rego (Lisbon, 1935 – London, 2022); “adding tails”, which all readers and viewers do, is the most accurate expression that define the visitors of exhibitions. Paula Rego was one of the artists who obtained the most recognition in the country where she was born and raised (Portugal) as well as in England, where she studied and lived until her death, and worldwide. The readings of her work underlined above all the relationship between her painting, drawings and prints with folk and traditional tales (many of them Portuguese in origin), with literature (including for children) and with her autobiography (especially her childhood), as well as on her contribution to a constant questioning and redefinition of women’s role in society. Held in the same year when Paula Rego has passed away, this exhibition, showcases a remarkable amount of her works in the Serralves Collection – including the impressive polyptych Possessão [Possession] (2004) – is an opportunity to once again admire her work.
This exhibition is organized by the Serralves Foundation, curated by António Preto and by João Mário Grilo, and coordinated by Carla Almeida. MANOEL DE OLIVEIRA AND PORTUGUESE CINEMA 1. FOR THE GOOD OF THE NATION (1929-1969) To accompany the exhibition, the Serralves Foundation - House of Cinema has published a bilingual book (Portuguese / English) reproducing over two hundred of documents from the Manoel de Oliveira Collection; and with especially commissioned essays by António Preto, João Mário Grilo, Liliana Rosa, Maria Irene Aparício, Patrícia Castello Branco, Ricardo Vieira Lisboa, Susana Nascimento Duarte and Susana Viegas. More informations here: https://www.serralves.pt/en/ciclo-serralves/a-bem-da-nacao-1929-1969
António Zambujo and Yamandu Costa celebrated 200 years of Brazilian Independence during a show, celebrating the harmony between cultures in a symbiosis of Lusophone rhythms. They meet again to continue following the path that unites them. By incorporating influences from the Brazilian songbook, António Zambujo has broken down real and imaginary borders. His music, first forged in the tradition of cante alentejano and fado, has created a unique personality and inspired a new cycle in Portuguese music. With unforgettable performances, Yamandu Costa carries the mark of the music of the south of the American continent and transits through different styles, forming with his seven-string guitar a rare symbiosis. https://www.casadamusica.com/pt/canais/sro/buyticket?event=73507
The artist born in the city of Porto, Luísa Gonçalves, inaugurates the painting and drawing exhibition "The Ways of Creation", a work about the world of hazel trees, on March 11, at 4pm, at the Árvore Cooperative. Luísa Gonçalves and her work, which has won several awards in the area of plastic arts since 1970 and until the present day, is described thus by Nuno Higino, professor of Sociology and writer, " (...) it was this element, apparently accessory, which most interested Luísa Gonçalves. She certainly took a long time to study the world of hazelnut trees. She photographed, she drew: the shrub and its fruits. And she took notes especially on the last capsule, the outer one. A good number of the works on show are variations on the bracts that surround the hazelnut, which are green at first and brownish when ripe. The hazelnut is a shrub that exists in abundance in Beiras, namely in Mata da Margaraça. It may have been there, in the places of its origin, that Luísa found the inspiration for this exhibition (...) Room 1
The artist Mónica Faria inaugurates the Textile Work "Vencer o Medo" (Overcoming Fear) on March 11, at 4pm, at the Árvore Cooperative. According to the artist, " Overcoming Fear" "is a daily exercise present from the simplest gesture such as waking up or eating. The space is occupied by everyday elements from which webs are woven, creating plots and recording symbolic narratives - of lived, imagined or invented experiences. It is a vicious circle, or just a cycle, where ending only happens with a beginning. All these elements converge into a fringe. Fringe that, like the outline of the arraiolos carpet, defines the shape of a house, fed by the looms presented. This is an artistic installation, in which the author confronts us with the need to make a decision. Do I say or not say? Do I go or not go? To marry or not to marry... to forget or not to forget! To scream or not to scream.... To give or not to give. I either kill or I don't kill. I hear or I don't hear. I enter or I don't enter! Mónica Faria lives in Porto and works between Guimarães and Porto. She studied Plastic Arts - Sculpture at FBAUP (2005), participated in the Erasmus Programme - Coventry (2003), developed her MA in Visual Arts Education at FPCEUP (2010), FCT scholarship (2012-2016) - with research in Fieldwork in the quilombola community Conceição das Crioulas, Pernambuco, Brazil - completed her PhD in Art Education at FBAUP (2016). She participated in the artistic residency Peninsulares - Contextile/Estúdio Índigo/Museu Nacional de Artes Decorativas Madrid (2021). Solo exhibition, "Unstable Culture" - Museu Nogueira da Silva (2023). Equivalent Guest Professor to Assistant Professor at the School of Architecture, Art and Design - EAAD of the University of Minho (since 2018). Since 2017, integrated researcher in Lab2PT/SpaceR.
“The Crucible was an act of desperation.” Thus the playwright Arthur Miller describes the genesis of this play, which is based on historical facts. In 1692, in the small American city of Salem, men and women are persecuted and put in trial for witchcraft. Rumours and lies are aflame, and no one seems safe from accusation or revenge. Premiered in 1953, The Crucible was conceived as an allegory of the darkness of McCarthyism, which corroded the heart of America. Miller was also a victim of that anti-communist fever. Out of its epicentre – a primeval fascination with paranoia, a collective rage that demands the sacrifice of individuals – multiple echoes resound today. With this play, Nuno Cardoso continues his inquiry into the foundations of community life, a new study of social man’s blindness. Miller again: “Below its concerns with justice the play evokes a lethal brew of illicit sexuality, fear of the supernatural, and political manipulation.” BY: ARTHUR MILLER DIRECTED BY: NUNO CARDOSO CAST: ANA BRANDÃO, CAROLINA AMARAL, JOANA CARVALHO, JORGE MOTA, LISA REIS, MÁRIO SANTOS, NUNO NUNES, PAULO FREIXINHO, PATRÍCIA QUEIRÓS, PEDRO FRIAS, SÉRGIO SÁ CUNHA PRODUCED BY TEATRO NACIONAL SÃO JOÃO PLAYING TIME 2:30 WHITH INTERMISSION AGES 12 AND UP
For the first time in their careers, António Victorino d'Almeida and Mário Laginha present together in a concert with the show "Improvisation on two Pianos". Both pianists and extraordinary improvisers, although from different generations and musical experiences, propose to risk themselves in an improvisation that will go through the unfathomable paths of the musical experiences of each one, in a unique and unrepeatable concert. A historic moment for two great pianists who admire each other and who finally realise their dream of presenting a concert side by side. Main Hall Age Classification M/6 Approximate duration 1h15 Doors open 20h00
Double concert with two exciting musical projects. In the first part, TROLL'S TOY bring their fierce originality - an energetic music that dilutes borders, crossing the universes of rock and jazz. In the second part, REI BRUXO will present their new multidisciplinary show. New compositions from their upcoming album (to be released soon) will be added to the repertoire released over the last five years. With video projection, light design by Tiago Silva and sound design by Rui Barreiros, this promises to be an unprecedented sensory experience that goes beyond the traditional concert concept and materialises a stimulating live music show.
In its production of Rei Édipo [Oedipus Rex], the SillySeason company uses the “western canon” of Sophocles’ Oedipal myth to build a bridge to contemporaneity. The present time is reinterpreted and rewritten through the exploration of several stages of recognition and its attendant ethical pathos. According to Harold Bloom, Oedipus is afflicted with a Hamlet complex, a pathology that consists in “thinking not too much but much too well”, acting as a sort of symbol for the distorted reality in which we live. Nowadays, thinking too well (i.e. rationally) has become an impossible task, due to both the overriding dystopia and the lack of tools that might filter the information we receive. In Rei Édipo, the myth appears – as a symbol of impossible judgement – immersed in twisted rhetoric, futurology, demagogy and mysticism, and factual truth cannot be known. SillySeason states: “This will be our tragedy.”
In a national premiere, the Polish countertenor Jakub Józef Orliński with orchestra Il Pomo d'Oro, performs at Teatro Rivoli. In tribute to Jorge Gil (1943-2019), founder of "Em Órbita", a reference in the Portuguese radio broadcasting panorama and in the organisation of classical music concerts. More informations: https://www.teatromunicipaldoporto.pt
On the 26th of March at 5pm, join a special guided tour to the centennial camellias and Trees in the Parque de São Roque and finish with a 10 year old Port Wine in a unique winter garden. The visit will be guided in english by landscape architect João Almeida and by Pedro Alvares Ribeiro, President of Casa São Roque Centro de Arte. Camellias are born to be contemplated and for their History to remain in time. This is why we invite you to discover the more than 200 species of Camellias - 70 of which are centenarians - which flower in the garden of Casa São Roque. Limited availability.
Spiritus is a unique immersive show that takes place in the iconic Clérigos Church in the city of Porto. After having received more than 70,000 visitors, it is back to the majestic Church of Clérigos. An experience for all ages, available every day of the week. Spiritus - The best way to travel is to feel is an innovative multimedia show that transcends the walls of the Igreja dos Clérigos, in the city of Porto. This immersive experience explores music, light, energy and color, creating an atmosphere of visual poetry, synchrony and lightness that fills the entire architecture of Igreja dos Clérigos. Created by OCUBO and freely inspired by the poem “After all, the best way to travel is to feel” by Álvaro de Campos, Spiritus awakens the imagination, spirituality and mindfulness of each viewer.