TETINE

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

UNDER THE SAME SUN

I

IN THE BEGINNING THERE WAS RHYTHM
IN THE BEGINNING THERE WAS WORD


II

WE WERE
WE WERE TOURISTS
WE WERE ALL TOURISTS
I WROTE WE ALL WERE TOURISTS UNDER
I WROTE WE ALL WERE TOURISTS UNDER THE SAME
I WROTE WE WERE ALL TOURISTS UNDER THE SAME SUN
UNDER THE SAME SUN WE WERE ALL TOURISTS
UNDER THE SAME SUN WE WERE ALL TOURISTS
UNDER THE SAME SUN WE WERE
UNDER THE SAME SUN WE
UNDER THE SAME SUN

AT HOME
AT HOME WE
AT HOME WE WERE
AT HOME WE WERE ALL
AT HOME WE WERE ALL TOURISTS
AT HOME WE WERE ALL TOURISTS UNDER
AT HOME WE WERE ALL TOURISTS UNDER THE
AT HOME WE WERE ALL TOURISTS UNDER THE SAME
AT HOME WE WERE ALL TOURISTS UNDER THE SAME SUN

III

WHO PUT YOU IN PRISON?

IV

[                           ]

V

BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM


Dedicated to Malinowski & Julio Barroso

Bruno Verner / february 2004.   









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Monday, 23 November 2015

Tetine talk for The School of The South @Studio Voltaire.


TROPICAL MUTANT PUNK FUNK talk at The School of The South

Bruno Verner and Eliete Mejorado discuss Brazilian Post Punk scene, DIY Tropical culture and the emergence of an underground post-tropicalist sensibility. From the last years of military dictatorship to the country's subsequent re-democratisation process, Brazilian post punk was instrumental in forging an experimentalist and yet popular public sphere. 
Drawing on Tetine’s albums The Sexual Life of the Savages (Soul Jazz Records) & Slum Dunk Presentes Funk Carioca (Mr Bongo Records), this talk explores an intense period of collectivism and DIY production of music, text, art & performance. 

The School of the South: Lessons in Latin American Art
Convened by Sol Calero & Isobel Whitelegg

Saturday 21st November 2015
Over time the term Latin American Art has accumulated different associations. It structures knowledge and shapes expectations, while at the same time being strategically appropriated or subverted by artists, curators, and critics. The aim of this day is not to debate the validity of the term ‘Latin American Art’ but rather to think about the meanings it has gained through past and present practices, and how this inherited category can be used or negotiated.

Morning Class, 11am – 1.30pm
Three informal presentations by Juan Pedro Fabra Guemberena; Jaime Gili & Lucia Pizzani, and Bruno Verner & Eliete Mejorado (Tetine). 
Afternoon Class, 2.30 – 4.30pm
A discussion with Alessio Antoniolli, Tanya Barson & Kiki Mazzucchelli
Places are free but due to high demand, booking is essential
Book here…
Studio Voltaire
1a Nelsons Row, London SW4 7JR






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Friday, 20 November 2015

Tropical Mutant Punk Funk for The School Of The South @ Studio Voltaire.

TROPICAL MUTANT PUNK FUNK ( A TALK BY TETINE ) AT THE SCHOOL OF THE SOUTH  (morning class)

Bruno Verner and Eliete Mejorado discuss the 1980’s Brazilian Post Punk scene, DIY Tropical culture and the emergence of an underground post-tropicalist sensibility as part of  The School of The South @ Studio Voltaire in South London

From the last years of military dictatorship to the country's subsequent re-democratisation process, Brazilian post punk was instrumental in forging an experimentalist and yet popular public sphere. 

Drawing on Tetine’s albums The Sexual Life of the Savages (Soul Jazz Records) & Slum Dunk Presentes Funk Carioca (Mr Bongo Records), this talk explores an intense period of collectivism and DIY production of music, text, art & performance. 

Convened by Isobel Whitelegg and Sol Callero.

Sol-Calero-'La-Escuela-del-Sur,'-2015.-A-Studio-Voltaire-commission.-Installation-view-Studio-Voltaire,-London.-Courtesy-of-the-artist-and-Laura-Bartlett-Gallery,-London.-Credit-Andy-Keate_i
















The School of the South: Lessons in Latin American Art at Studio Voltaire.
Convened by Sol Calero & Isobel Whitelegg
Saturday 21st November 2015
Over time the term Latin American Art has accumulated different associations. It structures knowledge and shapes expectations, while at the same time being strategically appropriated or subverted by artists, curators, and critics. The aim of this day is not to debate the validity of the term ‘Latin American Art’ but rather to think about the meanings it has gained through past and present practices, and how this inherited category can be used or negotiated. 

Morning Class, 11am – 1.30pm
Three informal presentations by Juan Pedro Fabra Guemberena; Jaime Gili & Lucia Pizzani, and Bruno Verner & Eliete Mejorado (Tetine).
Subjects for study include the pedagogical legacies of Torres-Garcia’s original ‘Escuela del Sur’ in 1970s Uruguay; modern art and contemporary political subjectivity in Venezuela, and Brazilian Post Punk and DIY tropical culture.
Afternoon Class, 2.30 – 4.30pm
A discussion with Alessio Antoniolli, Tanya Barson & Kiki Mazzucchelli focuses on how Latin American art is represented through artinstitutional and curatorial practices, addressing the possibilities and limitations of international visibility.
Places are free but due to high demand, booking is essential
Book here…
About the contributors:
Sol Calero (born 1982, Caracas, lives and works in Berlin). Recent solo exhibitions include Sala Mendoza, Caracas (2015), SALTS, Birsfelden (2015), Gillmeier Rech, Berlin (2014); Laura Bartlett Gallery, London (2014); Frutta Gallery, Rome (2013). Recent group exhibitions include KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin (2015) and Mostyn, Llandudno (2015). Upcoming projects in 2016 include David Dale Gallery, Glasgow. Calero is represented by Laura Bartlett Gallery, London.  She is co-director of the Berlin project space Kinderhook & Caracas.
Isobel Whitelegg is an art historian, lecturer and curator. She specialised in Latin American Art at the University of Essex and has published widely on the international reception of art from Latin America. Isobel has recently joined the University of Leicester’s School of Museum Studies, and teaches its specialised MA Art Museum & Gallery Studies programme. She is interested in approaching exhibition history not as a series of isolated events but rather by relation to the wider histories of contemporary art museums and non-collecting institutions, and a focus for her current research is the critical history of the Bienal de Sao Paulo. She previously occupied two positions that operated between academic and arts-institutional contexts: as LJMU Research Curator within the Tate Research Centre: Curatorial Practice & Museology (2014-15) and as Head of Nottingham Contemporary’s Public Programme (2011-14), a leading platform for the public debate of ideas and practices relevant to contemporary art and its institutions. Prior to this she was Course Director, MA Curating, Chelsea College of Art & Design (2009-11) and a member of the TrAIN Research Centre, University of the Arts London (2008-11).
Alessio Antoniolli is the Director of Gasworks, London, where he leads a programme of residencies, exhibitions and participation projects focusing on emerging UK and international artists. During his time at Gasworks he has curated the first exhibition UK exhibition by Song Dong, Lynette Yiadom Boakye, Renata Lucas and Tamar Guimaraes amongst others. Alessio is also the Director of Triangle Network, a platform that generates and facilitate projects amongst a group of grass-roots organisations around the world. In 2009 Alessio instigated the Knowledge and Skills Sharing Programme, an ongoing series of professional development and training opportunities for artists and arts coordinators within the Triangle Network.
Tanya Barson has been Curator of International Art at Tate Modern since 2007. She was Exhibitions and Collections Curator at Tate Liverpool from 2004, having joined Tate in 1997. Most recently, she curated the exhibition Mira Schendel, Tate Modern (2013). Other exhibitions she has curated include Frida Kahlo, Tate Modern (2005), Afro Modern: Journeys through the Black Atlantic, Tate Liverpool (2010) and The Peripatetic School: Itinerant Drawing from Latin America, Drawing Room, London (2011). She was an advisory curator on the exhibition Adventures of the Black Square: Abstract Art and Society 1915-2015 at the Whitechapel Art Gallery (2015) and is currently working on a major retrospective exhibition of Georgia O’Keeffe to be presented at Tate Modern in 2016. Since 2002 she has worked on acquisitions of Latin American art for Tate’s collection and as a result has travelled, lectured and conducted research widely in the region.
Juan-Pedro Fabra Guemberena graduated from The Royal College of Art in Stockholm 2002. Fabra Guemberena’s work has been exhibited extensively internationally, among others in the exhibition “Delays and Revolutions” at the 50th Venice Biennale, 2003; “My Private Heroes” Marta Hereford Museum, 2006; “The Moderna Exhibition”, The Modern Museum of Art, Stockholm, 2006; “Favored Nations”, 5th Momentum Biennal, Moss, 2009; 1st Biennale of The Americas, Denver, 2013; and the School of Kyev, Kyev, 2015. Fabra Guemberena is represented in collections such as The Modern Museum of Art, Stockholm; Sammlung Goetz, München; and The Wanås Foundation, Knislingen, Sweden. He is currently based in Berlin and Stockholm.
Kiki Mazzucchelli is an independent curator and writer working between London and São Paulo. She holds an MA in Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths College and is currently a PhD candidate at TrAIN (University of the Arts). Recent projects include the Solo Projects/ Latin America section at ARCO Madrid (with Emiliano Valdes and Miguel Lopez), Tonico Lemos Auad’s solo exhibition at Pivô (São Paulo) and the group show Akakor (Galeria Baró, São Paulo). Forthcoming projects include Sitelines, Site Santa Fe Biennial (2016), New Mexico. Recent publications include The São Paulo Biennial and the Rise of Contemporary Brazilian Art (IN Contemporary Art Brazil, ed. Hossein Amirsadegui and Catherine Petitgas, London: Transglobe,2012) and a chapter on the São Paulo art scene in the forthcoming publication Avant-Gardes of the 21st Century (London: Phaidon, 2013).
Lucia Pizzani born in Caracas, (1975) lives and works in London. She holds a BA in Communications Studies, (Universidad Católica Andres Bello, Caracas), Certificate in Conservation Biology from CERC at Columbia University (New York) and Master in Fine Arts from the Chelsea College of Art and Design (London). Recent awards and residencies include: Photofusion Hotshoe Award 14, (London, 2014) the Emerging Artist Award by the AICA, International Art Critics Association/Venezuela, (Caracas, 2013), and the XII Premio Eugenio Mendoza (Caracas, 2013) with a following Residency at Hangar (Barcelona). Pizzani has exhibited internationally in museums and galleries such as Oficina#1 (Caracas), Sala Mendoza (Caracas), Cecilia Brunson Projects (London), Queens Museum (NY), MOLAA Museum Of Latin American Art (LA), Jacobo Borges Museum (Caracas), Stephen Lawrence Gallery (London), the MARCO Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Vigo and Universidad de los Andes (Bogotá), among others. Her works is represented in private and public collections such as the Essex Collection for Art from Latin America ESCALA, Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, CPPC, Museum Of Latin American Art, MOLAA, Colección Banco Mercantil and Colección Juan Yarur.
Jaime Gili is a Venezuelan-born, London-based  artist known for a painting practice that moves away from the strict, traditional boundaries of the canvas, and into the realm of public interventions. He uses bold, modernist designs on a huge scale to play off of pre-existing architectural features and cover spaces like walls and even entire building facades. Gili’s large-scale works are deeply intertwined with his Venezuelan heritage—referencing the public artworks commissioned in Latin America during the oil industry’s economic boom times of the twentieth century. Gili has exhibited his work widely, including a solo exhibition at Kunsthalle Winterthur, and group exhibitions at the Liverpool Biennial, Kunsthalle Bern, the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and the Royal Academy in London.
Bruno Verner (b. Belo Horizonte, Brazil) is a musician, poet and performance artist best known for his work with Brazilian tropical punk funk art duo Tetine which he formed with Eliete Mejorado in São Paulo in 1995. With Tetine, he has created a multitude of music & performance works from the spoken word to electronica, including ritualistic performances, sound installations, film & video. His music has been released on labels such as Soul Jazz Records / Mr Bongo / Bizarre Music  / Sulphur Records /Slum Dunk Music – including a collaboration with French artist Sophie Calle “Samba de Monalisa – Tetine Vs Sophie Calle”. Verner has also been instrumental in bringing the Brazilian underground music scene to the attention of the UK and Europe for a number of years. He compiled, presented & mixed the first album of Baile Funk  produced outside of Brazil ‘Slum Dunk Presents Funk Carioca’, (Mr Bongo Records in 2004) as well as an essential primer to early-80s Post-Punk from São Paulo, the influential The Sexual Life of The Savages – Underground Post Punk from Sao Paulo, released on Soul Jazz Records in 2005).  Verner was also an active member of Belo Horizonte‘s post punk & industrial scene from the mid 80’s, having played alongside pioneering local acts such as R. Mutt, Divergência Socialista, Ida & e Os Voltas & O Grito Mudo  – over a period spanning from 1984-1990.  His early sound work is compiled in limited cassette tapes & compilations such as Lilith Lunaire by Divergência Socialista, R. Mutt (R. Mutt), Mulata Urbana (O Grito Mudo), Jovens Raptados (Ida & Os Voltas) ‘Substancia’ – (Marcelo Dolabela & Divergência Socialista). Verner’s early tracks with Divergência Socialista, Tetine and O Grito Mudo were also included in the compilation Uncorrupted Tropical Wave (1983 – 2011). Bruno Verner is currently carrying out his PHD research in Visual Cultures on Goldsmiths University. On another note he has also run the Brazilian radio show Slum Dunk on Resonance Fm 104.4 since the station’s inception.
Eliete Mejorado (b.Sao Paulo, Brazil) is a Brazilian artist, musician and filmmaker, also member of tropical punk funk art duo Tetine. Mejorado has been working widely throughtout Europe and Brazil presenting experimental performance pieces as well as exhibiting art videos, films, installations and radio shows. Recent projects include 53 Diamantes: A Collection of Black Stories, Crimes, Falsos-Brilhantes & Other Poems, at Galeria Jacqueline Martins in Sao Paulo, Tetine’s new film-essay ‘The 4th World’ (2015) commissioned by Itau Cultural, and pieces such as UNHEARD & SPOKEN, “I Hope you Enjoy Your Stay”, “Tetine vs O Bandido Da Luz Vermelha” amongst many others. Mejorado has also produced a number of artist’s music albums, 12’ Eps and compilations including Black Semiotics (2013), In Loveland With You (2013), Tropical Punk (2010), Let Your X’s Be Y’s (2008). Her music has been released internationally on record labels such as Soul Jazz Records / Mr Bongo / Bizarre Music  / Sulphur Records /Slum Dunk Music. With Tetine, she has also extensively performed live from opening ‘Tropicalia – A Revolution in Brazilian Culture’ exhibition at the Barbican Centre in London to numerous art performances for museums, art spaces, cinemas and festivals around the world. Actions, projects and live performances were shown from Palais de Tokyo in Paris to Chicago (The Wire’s Adventures in Modern Music Festival) and Sonar (Festival of Advanced Music & New Media Art,  Museu Serralves, Hebbel Am Ufer in Berlin, Whitechapel Gallery, Frankfurter Kunstverein, National Museum of Contemporary Art of Norway, Sternessen Museum amongst many others.
Places are free but due to high demand, booking is essential
Book here…





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Thursday, 5 November 2015

Sobre Vladimir Safatle e "O Fim da Musica"


Em que condomínio esse pavão de terno passado mora? Eu gosto do Christian Dunker mas definitivamente Vladimir Safatle está anos-luz pra trás, pelo menos quando pensa ou teoriza música pop ou mesmo 'erudita' - se é que é possível ainda utilizar esse termo. Nenhum artista brasileiro se manifestou sobre isso?

Tô escrevendo isso porque li a matéria sobre o 'fim da música’ do Vladmir Safatle no Brasil e também uma réplica bem mais esperta de um outro crítico (Acauan Oliveira) na página do Pedro Alexandre Sanches. Eu ja tinha achado o 'filósofo' (Safatle) elitista pela matéria publicada na sua coluna da Folha De Sao Paulo mas a explicação dele na TV cultura, alguns dias mais tarde, é realmente bem pior, além de ressaltar mais nítida e acusticamente quem o boneco formalista é. Pela fala. Pela voz. Argumentos e cacoetes linguísticos pedindo 'processsos de complexificação' na forma da canção popular.... falando em covardia critica, inovaçao formal... ou stuff like this "o pessoal da favela, da periferia nao tem acesso a John Cage e Ligeti….” ??? Pensei. Que papo é esse filósofo? 

Na televisão ele continua: quando isso NĀO seria um problema? 

Eu digo quando isso seria um probelma? Por que isso seria um problema? Como ele sabe que o 'pessoal da periferia e das favelas' nao tem acesso? Quem garante que ter acesso a Ligeti te faz mais 'especial' como músico e interfere na sua criatividade? Quanta presunção. Quanta leitura mal feita rapaz. E ainda dispara caretices como "veja bem nós conhecemos momentos de simplicidade que foram decisivos na musica popular"…e "mesmo nessa musica de maior consumo"…. ou mais chavão ainda …. "blues, punk…graças ao punk vc teve 10 anos de maior produtividade no rock mundial"….  "uma simplicidade bloqueadora". Para então sacrifar Deleuze & Guatari numa empreitada elitista contra o Funk. Sempre o Funk. Diz ele: "Nao há dinamica no interior dessas formas"

Tenho a impressão que o filósofo nao sabe absolutamente nada sobre Funk - tanto estética como historicamente - e se embaralha um tanto também com o legado de John Cage e outras posteriores cenas (e/ou simbologias) músico-espaciais 'sérias' ou não, 'eruditas' ou populares surgidas ao longo da imensa e descontinua narrativa do pop brasileiro e mundial. O fato é que pega mal pra xuxu ridicularizar as influências do FUNK em TV publica e sua maior potência, o beat, o sampler como um procedimento afetivo estético-histórico-sonoro-político e a voz (ou a não-voz) depois de tudo isso. 
Do mesmo modo tenho a impressão que o filósofo nunca acompanhou a evolução da música eletrônica brasileira e tão pouco os 5 exemplos das músicas mais tocadas no Brasil que a apresentadora exibiu pra ilustrar a matéria na TV Cultura. Eu não entendo de sertanejo universitário, não acompanho e não é minha praia, mas pelo meu ouvido os exemplos que a apresentadora mostra estão na verdade muito mais próximos de uma "estrutura formal” tradicional da canção MPBistica (como o filosofo parece sugerir), isto é, de uma estrutura pop como conhecemos do que para uma outra historia qualquer. 
Em outras palavras: não há dinâmica no interior da fala de Safatle, só o estado bruto de um 'afeto' generativo não-libertador, preconceituoso e classista.

O fato é que muito chão rolou, muitas 'segundas escolas vienenses' de fato se estabeleceram no mundo e cenas & micro-cenas invisíveis e consistentes se criaram em todo canto. Em todo canto. 
Outras tensões vieram à tona, para usar um jargão do discurso de Safatle na TV. Tensões sociais, sonoras, plásticas, simbólicas e ideológicas que não podem ser ignoradas.
Fico aqui pensando... chega desse discurso clichezento elitista-bossanovista da 'sincope de João Gilberto’  - essa foi uma justificativa de anos da nossa música popular brasileira MPB comandada pela classe media e alta para enfraquecer ou desmerecer outras tensões (pulsões) ou mesmo outros tipos de música (ou mesmo anti-musica) que fugiam de um formato cristalizado nos braços de violão do país. Do mesmo modo, essa ja é considerada uma fala-discurso entoada por todos os nossos velhos articuladores musicais; um discurso critico dominante repetido, reformulado e requentado há anos no Brasil. O nosso ABC..... aquele, de quem leu o 'Balanco da Bossa', fez a liçao concretista, tropicalista mas nunca saiu de casa e parou/vagou por ai. Nesse sentido o discurso de Safatle torna-se pouco generoso, caduco, com poucos insights, canônico, 'escolar', reprodutor, sistematizador-autoritário disfarçado de libertário. Fico perplexo quando descubro que ele é um rapaz novo, parte de uma nova cena de intelectuais brasileiros... mas carregando os mesmos cacoetes. Não adianta só pedir a tensão. A tensão se manifesta, ela já esta no ar - digo estética e historicamente. Esta no break, nesse intervalo, nessa fissura. E está no Brasil principalmente em suas micro-cenas sufocadas mas ainda respirando. A tensão está (e esteve) no rap, no funk, no experimental, na eletrônica, no post-punk e até mesmo na 'nova' MPB, mas é preciso sair, ou entrar de vez... dar uma volta na rua e entender a tensão, entender a escuridão. Pisar nos ovos. Tirar os óculos. 

Não adianta transformar a coisa em um 'sistema' e ficar parado em algum lugar entre a 'universidade' e um 'projeto harmônico' saudoso que um dia te tocou. 

Esse elitismo é e sempre foi a pior coisa estampada na voz e no corpo daqueles que frequentaram escola particular no país. Não é simplesmente uma questão estética, é uma questão de classe.



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