• Nazareth Pacheco, Hemácia P
  • Red blood cell P
  • Nazareth Pacheco, Hemácia P

Nazareth Pacheco

“Red blood cell P”

Red blood cell P

(SKU. 5050)

  • Date

    2016
  • Technique

    solid wine acrylic
  • Dimensions

    (H x W x D) 19 x 19 x 7 cm
  • Edition

    15 + 3PA

  • Comes with certificate of authenticity


Nazareth Pacheco's work is autobiographical in nature. The artist considers the female body as a place for medical practices that aim to adapt it to aesthetic improvements. She worked for many years with sharp and piercing objects, such as needles and razors. On some occasions, she cut herself with these objects, which led her to observe the dried blood on her own hands and then draw and photograph it.

In this work, the artist presents red blood cells, produced in thick and heavy burgundy acrylic. The work asks the viewer to get closer, so that they can see themselves reflected and provoke questions about themselves.

Works from Nazareth Pacheco

Biography

Nazareth Pacheco - Carbono Galeria

Nazareth Pacheco

b. 1961, São Paulo (SP), Brazil | Lives and works in São Paulo (SP), Brazil.

Nazareth Pacheco's sculptures and installations explore the female body and its transformations, with powerful visual and symbolic aspects that create contradictory feelings in the viewer, such as fascination and repulsion. She has held solo and group exhibitions at important national and international institutions, such as the Maria Antonia University Center (São Paulo), the Maison du Brèsil (Brussels), the Instituto de Cultura Brasileira (Berlin), the Centro Cultural São Paulo, the Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo, the Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts (Jordan), the Instituto Figueiredo (Berlin), and the Instituto de Arte Moderna de São Paulo. Ferraz (Ribeirão Preto), the Museum of Contemporary Art of Niterói, the Hélio Oiticica Municipal Art Center (Rio de Janeiro), the Hong Kong Arts Center (China), the Fundación Caja de Madrid (Madrid), the Malba (Buenos Aires), the El Museu Del Barrio (New York), the Paço Imperial (Rio de Janeiro), the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, among many others.

The artist began producing her work in the 1980s, as part of a generation that dealt intensely with body issues. Her work is recognized for its connections with the feminine universe and the search for beauty, often related to surgical interventions to construct the ideal image. She creates three-dimensional objects related to the universe of admiration and aesthetic pleasure, but composed of elements capable of causing harm, such as cutting blades and sharp objects, mixed with beads, mirrors, acrylics and metals.

Representative galleries

Lume Gallery , Sao Paulo