“Berlinscapes” by Tuca Vieira at Gallery 1500

29 03 2011

Tomorrow in New York: 1500 Gallery presents “Berlinscapes” by Brazilian photographer Tuca Vieira, winner of the 2010 Premio Porto Seguro, the most important annual art photography prize in Brazil. That’s worth a mention – and the more so as deconarch.com has presented Tuca’s work in an interview and I’ve actually been around when he was working on the great photographs in Berlin! Congratulations Tuca!

Link to Interview

Berlinscapes #5 Digital C-Print 47.2" x 37.0" (120 x 94 cm), Edition of 5

Berlinscapes #5 Digital C-Print 47.2" x 37.0" (120 x 94 cm), Edition of 5 © T. Vieira

.

.

Tuca Vieira: Berlinscapes

March 30 – July 30, 2011

1500 Gallery, New York

www.1500gallery.com

There will be a reception for the artist at 1500 Gallery on Wednesday, March 30, 6-8 pm, with caipirinhas courtesy of Leblon Cachaça.

.

.

.

 


Berlinscapes #3 Digital C-Print 47.2" x 37.0" (120 x 94 cm), Edition of 5

Berlinscapes #3 Digital C-Print 47.2" x 37.0" (120 x 94 cm), Edition of 5 © T. Vieira

PR-Text: Drawing on the formal rigor and architectural inspiration of the Düsseldorf School, Vieira creates his own distinctive style. Berlinscapes depicts functional architecture but in a nocturnal setting, with sensual lighting. One could describe it as a “tropicalization” of German photography’s rigidity and formality – “Germany meets Brazil”. Made during Vieira’s 2009 artist residency in Berlin, this body of work highlights the contrasts and juxtapositions of “old Berlin” and “new Berlin”, revealing traces of not only divergent prosperity, but also the great battles for territorial and ideological conquest that caused it. If, on one hand, the physical presence of man escapes the viewfinder, on the other it is reinforced by clear evidence of man’s effect on the landscape through monuments and markings, denoting conquests and circumscribing the course of history. From these fragments, the city of Berlin emerges in all its complexity.

Vieira is from Sao Paulo and from 2004-2009 worked as a reporter and photojournalist for the Brazilian newspaper Folha de São Paulo. Since 2002 Vieira has worked on personal projects relating to cityscapes, architecture and urbanism. His work is present in the collections of the Sao Paulo Museum of Art (Brazil), Itaú Cultural (Brazil), and the Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts (Japan), among others. For more information on Tuca Vieira please visit his page on 1500′s website: www.1500gallery.com

Berlinscapes #17 Digital C-Print 47.2" x 37.0" (120 x 94 cm), Edition of 5

Berlinscapes #17 Digital C-Print 47.2" x 37.0" (120 x 94 cm), Edition of 5 © T. Vieira

About 1500 Gallery: 1500 Gallery is located in New York City’s West Chelsea gallery district and specializes in Brazilian photography – the first gallery in the world with this explicit focus. 1500 represents several of the most recognized Brazilian art photographers, both emerging and established, with works present in major collections in Brazil and worldwide. 8 of 1500’s photographers are present in the Sao Paulo Museum of Art’s collection of photography. 1500 was founded in 2010 by Alexandre Bueno de Moraes and Andrew S. Klug. For more information, visit www.1500gallery.com

Info + illus. courtesy 1500 Gallery

 

 

 





"It is beautiful to say that the camera is an extension of the eye but I see the camera more as a scratch book." Interview with Tuca Vieira

8 05 2009

I am glad to present you another impressive photo artist whose work is focusing on architecture, cityscapes, urban sceneries,… Brazilian photographer Tuca Vieira gives us insight into his work and tells us why chose photography, what literature means to him and how it influences his work with the camera, and how he met Oscar Niemeyer.

Tuca, thanks so much for sharing your thoughts!

© photos Tuca Vieira

Centro

Tuca Vieira: Centro

Why photography? How and why did you become a photographer?

I always wanted to have an instrument of expression. I have tried music and drawing before and now I realize that I was trying to say the same things. It is important to see the camera just as an instrument.
I have made an important travel in Europe when I was 16. I have visited many countries, alone with a backpack. At that time it was more difficult than today, I was the first in my family to visit Europe since the Italian immigrants and I wanted to share this experience with them. I had just a fake Yashica camera and a few rolls of film. I had to think before shooting. I became photographer at this moment.

Vale do Anhangabaú

Tuca Vieira: Vale do Anhangabaú

You studied languages and literature first. Why did you decide to become a photographer?

I have decided to be a photographer before the university. And when I had to choose a course, I thought language and literature would give me a good aesthetic, social and historical background. Many photographers I admire didn’t study photography. I love literature; writers are the best image creators I know. Kafka, Jorge Luis Borges and José Saramago are always on my mind when I think about photography.

What does photography mean to you, what possibilities does it offer?

Photography is like a passport. It puts you in some interesting situations that wouldn’t be possible otherwise. Sometimes I feel that what I have experienced, the people I meet, are more important than the photographs I take. In the future I am not sure if I will leave a good photographic work, but I will have many stories to tell.

How do you choose your motives?

Photography is a passion. I guide myself by the pleasure of being on the streets. And sometimes I feel that the subject chooses the photographer. I live in the centre of São Paulo. The city is not as beautiful as Rio but it is a fascinating city, full of creativity and energy. Unlike Rio, where the beauty is everywhere, São Paulo is a place where you are forced to find the beauty in order to support the urban chaos. It makes a wonderful photographic subject.

Tuca Vieria: Centro

Tuca Vieira: Centro

Who / What are your role models? Who / What influenced your work?

I try to bring to the photography what I learned with literature, cinema, and music. It is more influent to me than photography. A good poem is full of beautiful images. I try to say to young photographers (at least younger then me) that there is not much to learn with other photographers. To read a good book is the best photo lesson I know.

Why architecture photos? What are your ambitions with your photographs?

I don’t know if I am exactly an architecture photographer. Sometimes I feel myself closer to the landscape photographers. But instead of nature, I look to the cities. I don’t know if it is the same in English or German, but In Portuguese we call a big city “stone jungle” (selva de pedra).

[[yes, in German there's quite the same expression - Großstadtdschungel / jungle of the city - an idea, that became predominant in the 1910s and 1920s in Berlin and can often be found in Expressionist texts and poems. In English I heard say "urban jungle", though I don't know about the literature historical connotations.]]

VVTs, MoscouTuca Vieira: VVTs, Moscou

You mostly photographed São Paulo so far – but I take it that you are now exploring new cities, S. Petersburg, Berlin,…

Exactly. I have been photographing São Paulo during the last years I now I feel that it is time to explore different places. I am going to Berlin this year for a six months period. I am curious to see what will happen. São Paulo is my city and I love to see the work of a foreign photographer about São Paulo. Now I will be a foreigner in Berlin.

Did you shoot the major part of your o Paulo portrays from “above”, i.e. from an airplane?

Some are from the top of buildings, others from helicopter. But I also have a black and white work, more intimate and personal, where I try to make some “street photography”. It is important to me to be on the street level, closer to the people, even to understand the city from above.

Most of your photos are without humans. Is that intentional?

Tuca Vieria:  São Paulo, 2008

Tuca Vieira: São Paulo, 2008

ot intentional. I don’t think much about this. But even without people, I try to show the human presence behind the buildings. A city is perhaps the most complex human work ever made. I see a great human drama in the city shape.

What does architecture mean to you?

I lived in Belo Horizonte, in state of Minas Gerais when I was teenager, and I will never forget the impact of visiting the works of Niemeyer in the Pampulha complex or the colonial cities like Ouro Preto and Sabará. The richness of baroque and modernist architecture in Brazil (and its relations) is a wonderful example of what this country can offer to the world.

You portrayed Oscar Niemeyer – any experiences you want to share about meeting him?

escritório, Rio de Janeiro

Tuca Vieira: escritório, Rio de Janeiro

Oscar Niemeyer is one the artists I most admire. Not only because of his architecture, but also his example as human being. The first time I went to his office to portrait him was not easy. I have introduced myself, saying I am a great admirer of him. After two or three pictures he sad to me: ok enough. I was disappointed until I put the camera back in the bag. Than we started to chat and we had a wonderful conversation about Brazil, about life. He made me think what I was I was doing there. It was not just about the pictures. He always repeats that architecture is not important. That day I realized that also photography is not important. To meet someone like Niemeyer is much more important.

What – in your opinion – is characteristical of your work and your working method?

Composition is important to me. I try to find a balance in the frame. I always have in my mind that every photograph is just an interpretation of the subject. The nature of the photography, its two dimensions, the frame format, request a different way of approaching a subject. It is beautiful to say that the camera is an extension of the eye but I see the camera more as a scratch book.

Where can we see your works? Exhibitions coming up?

I have a website, www.fototucavieira.com.br. Now I am planning this trip to Berlin and it would be wonderful to show my work in Germany.

Tuca Vieira, thank you very much for the interview!!




Architecture photographer Tuca Vieira

27 04 2009

Tuca Vieira (*1974), a young Brazilian photographer,  captures amazing shots of his native city Sao Paulo (but not only).

© photos Tuca Vieira

Tuca Vieira, Viaduto Santa Ifigênia

After having studied + graduated in languages and literature, he worked at Museu da Imagem e do Som and n-imagens photo agency. Since 1991 he is professional photographer,  among others as photographic reporter for Folha de S. Paulo. Vieira has studied with photographers Cláudio Feijó, Eduardo Castanho, Nair Benedicto and Eder Chiodetto.

Aeroporto de Congonhas

Tuca Vieira, Aeroporto de Congonhas

Tuca Vieira, Avenida Paulista

Since 2002, Vieira realizes his own projects about cityscape, architecture and urbanism in São Paulo and has received several awards. He has already participated in numerous exhibitions, in Brazil/South America, North America and Europe (e.g. his works were shown in “Multiple City”, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich last year).

Vieira’s photos show impressive views of the city, and reveal its structure – in often amazingly aesthetic pictures.

I noticed his work first in the context of an exhibition project by the Heidelberg Kunstverein: Islands and Ghettos, where the photo below – Paraisópolis – was shown on a magazine cover as an example of urbanization developments in South America (Ghettoisation, fragmentation into isolated urban communities, etc.).

I will report more about Tuca Vieira and his work soon.

Tuca Vieira, Paraisópolis