ARGENTINE CONTEMPORARY ART AT MAC NITERÓI.

Painting as the basis and as a problem, affective bonds and forms of unlearning. These are some of the themes that outline the exhibition "A Slow Coming - Chapter I", a new exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MAC) in Niterói, Brazil.

ARGENTINE CONTEMPORARY ART AT MAC NITERÓI.

Made up of Argentine artists working with contemporary art A Slow Coming, part of the Oxenford Collection, presents 57 works with a variety of languages: paintings, photographs, videos, visual and sound installations, performances, sculptures, collages and publications.

In addition, the exhibition is the initial phase of a traveling project. After the MAC, the Instituto Tomie Ohtake, in São Paulo, and the Fundação Iberê Camargo, in Porto Alegre, will also participate in the dynamic throughout 2023. Each chapter will exhibit a different selection of works from the Oxenford Collection, where each case will have a curatorial proposal inspired by an emblematic episode of the local cultural context, strengthening the dialogue between the Brazilian and Argentine art scene.

Niteroi will receive works that speak of the city and the forms of the urban, spaces of artistic sociability, literature and other arts, painting as the basis and as a problem, affective bonds and forms of unlearning. These highlights are the keys to think about the forms adopted by the ties of influence in contemporary Argentine art.

In total, 38 artists are part of the exhibition: Alberto Goldenstein, Alejandra Seeber, Alejandro Ros, Alfredo Londaibere, Ana Vogelfang, Bruno Dubner, Cecilia Szalkowicz, Claudia del Rio, Daniel Joglar, David Lamelas, Deborah Pruden, Diego Bianchi, Eduardo Costa , Eduardo Navarro, Fabio Kacero, Federico Manuel Peralta Ramos, Fernanda Laguna, Florencia Bohtlingk, Guillermo Kuitca, Jane Brodie, Joaquín Aras, Jorge Gumier Maier, Juan Tessi, Julio Le Parc, Karina Peisajovich, Liliana Porter, Luis Garay, Marcelo Alzetta, Marcelo Pombo, Mariana Ferrari, Marina de Caro, Pablo Accinelli, Pablo Schanton, Rosana Schoijett, Sebastián Gordín, Silvia Gurfein, Valentina Liernur.

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