• Marina Saleme,
  • Marina Saleme,
  • Saturday

Marina Saleme

“Saturday”

Saturday

(SKU. 6389)

  • Date

    2017
  • Technique

    digital printing on Hahnemühle 200g paper
  • Dimensions

    (H x W) 15 x 204 cm
  • Edition

    35 + 5PA

  • Comes with certificate of authenticity


Carbono invited artists who kindly developed exclusive editions and donated them to the Américas Amigas project. We are extremely pleased to contribute to this important initiative. Buy an edition and contribute too. All proceeds will go to the project.

Américas Amigas is a non-governmental organization and human rights organization that fights to reduce breast cancer mortality in Brazil, mainly benefiting the low-income population. The association's actions include: donation of mammogram machines, donation of mammogram exams, training and qualification of professionals in the area of ​​breast cancer, and awareness and information campaigns about the disease. From 2009 to the present, the NGO Américas Amigas has donated 23 mammogram machines, benefiting 13 Brazilian states. Learn more here .

In this edition, Marina Saleme has developed an accordion-book with 17 reproductions of the “Sábado” series, paintings made over the same image, an old family photograph. It can be displayed on a table or in a wall-mounted frame-box, where all the images can be seen (the frame is not included with the work).

Works from Marina Saleme

Biography

Marina Saleme - Carbono Galeria

Marina Saleme

b. 1958, São Paulo (SP), Brazil | Lives and works in São Paulo (SP), Brazil.

Questions about the existence and non-existence of things, their presence and absence, permeate Marina Saleme's paintings, engravings and photographs. Highlights include solo and group exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art of São Paulo, Paço das Artes (São Paulo), Maria Antônia University Center (São Paulo), Paço Imperial (Rio de Janeiro), Palácio das Artes (Belo Horizonte), Centre D'Art Contemporaine De Baie-Saint-Paul (Canada), the Brazilian Embassy in France (Paris), among others. Her works are in prominent public and private collections such as the Figueredo Ferraz Institute Collection (Ribeirão Preto), the Brazilian Embassy in Rome, the Itaú Cultural Institute. São Paulo, the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo, and the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo. São Paulo.

Marina completed her degree in Fine Arts at the Armando Alvares Penteado Foundation in 1982 and has not stopped producing since. We can see that in the early years the artist worked more with tonal spots, without reference to the human figure. Generally "Untitled", they point out shapes composed of straight lines. However, as the artist states: "My works are never completely abstract."

From the mid-1990s onwards, his work began to include allusions to figures such as people, rain, flowers and clouds, many of which were indicated in the titles themselves. In the following decade, his lines also became sinuous, curving to form arabesques that were sometimes partially hidden by other images and at other times were visible in the most superficial layer.

Her process is slow and reflective. Her works are created in layers, the surface treated several times until it gains substance and becomes denser. The artist adds, observes, questions, and makes things disappear. The act of erasing is part of Marina's creative process and can be related to the disappearance of things and people in the world. In this way, the final work is composed of a chain of images with translucency and opacity, images composed of a constant interplay between the visible and the invisible.

As Cauê Alves comments: “The narrative that emerges from Marina Saleme’s career is not a narrative with a beginning, middle and end, with a predictable development; on the contrary, it is one of an internal historicity that is unique to her work. Each work paves the way for the next because it takes up something from the previous one, something that is literally absent from it, that is perceived as lacking and that will be completed by the new work. And the path to the next one also emerges from the excess of meaning in each painting, which is precisely the possibility of it being seen from an unforeseen angle, that is, as pure openness.”

Representative galleries

Luisa Strina Gallery , Sao Paulo