Machado, Janaína Maria; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5981-7491; https://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K4734585Z2&tokenCaptchar=0cAFcWeA50I23xPqKZoI8g6GbtQ09atn5xh_6xvqyMlHsCiNfaeZJq93kOYKi3tZ8iieDyeRcaa4Qk1am9Zhxqd1BLPJCLXYzkaFDaRgFimyWKaM17yjmu3C-1Jlh6_C1gRTzlJUlwoDxcsvUVPca5aY5iU45NL30Y30QitEhQ8hqV7CwoYZIfO9WDaabwDWyt_FhcguARsQrfuShDSrUoOAAYVA7UlnBa_4vxc3nR1KTsRycz00jYEUfvHssOSpeejt3xK4RizLgeyLLgZT7Igw0O2OhMLS9g1T1c7kWxIVb-Cpbq-_1nj4SxE_Dl_KRNyH2YaVoI74HD_rL3arwyuqxHWe-cSh7awEIad7GxFPTbQyPyjOl-og06hXi1WG0bBQKahL21khjvW9Yrrld8jNeQz0yToFVrWfFlTz_vtQirS8Wx-XBgbH_6tUQ67Qb32E-AYX_52J-D6y3ZuqBJn5sD5p7a8WtX1n5dBjn8n6aTmC-tMbVmHGgpZXd-JJ5PuoV5NJ_Xr53V21b_IFpKpBbGGmvSg9Xm2_rDDlqgSerJl75JQptWAI6B7RtiU87iDAq-Y8qXs3H6GBShdTi9R6L4Q2o98AscQpDmHx7xZ7aUZH20QzJkYsoytQyi_b6-mszCEJgFkmjTt7dl8rwjnp1oz26KmI8VSgQvYCjqGdfzAOd3JIOqmMEPYJmxM8Dth52MdCCelMnmh-5lPuXAHm6qtVJlkw84Z2ZJ1ZK6hehkijMQtwI2Ibya67ZgpeC76Gw63aWoprXKLiIHaBHHDz_1M8Yvss7WIVIhAAP_FLVeLKdvtcx8j_GRnAdQjL1pc9TvtzmkSHwSqdo9UYrzDbbpTvGTowkfvQ
Resumo:
This dissertation is a critical reflection on contemporary poetic-politics of black
authorship presented in the editions of the São Paulo Biennial exhibitions on the debate of
ethnic-racial relations. In this text, the works of art, that is, the poetic-politics of black
authorship are understood around the notion of the body-witness in what concerns that these
poetics produce statements, arguments or evidence of an experience that when testifying about
the phenomenon lived, the artistic language manifests itself as a testimony of the commitment
of the black artist with his body, and therefore, these creations give intelligibility to collective
impressions from a point of view of the experience lived by himself (SOARES, 2020). In order
to give intelligibility to the critical reflection on the debate of ethno-racial relations imbricated
in the field of Visual Arts, this research analyzes the poetic-politics of black authorship
presented in the exhibitions of the Bienal de São Paulo over the first two decades of the 21st
century, under the key concept of epistemic radiography. This key-concept is inspired by the
thought of the Racionais MC's regarding the issues of ethno-racial relations that run through
their work. It is understood that the group's thought in relation to the problematization of antiblack racism is configured as an epistemological basis for the understanding of social relations.
To promote the dialogue between the visual artistic production of black authorship and the
critical thinking of the Racionais MC's in relation to the racial debate is to make use of the
interpretative proposition that the language of the sensitive elaborated by black subjects
collaborates to the construction of a critical epistemic radiographic synthesis that reflects the
social experiences of the Brazilian and Afro-diasporic social reality that is mediated by
racialized social relations. In this way, it is believed that these artistic creations of black
authorship radiograph and problematize social relations in contemporaneity, and in this way,
these poetics collaborate to the widening of the public debate of ethno-racial relations beyond
the traditional spaces of this discussion.
In short, in this text I present three fundamental questions for the development of the
reflection. 1. namely: How is the ethno-racial debate presented in the exhibitions of the
biennials from the poetic-politics of black Brazilian authorship and from other diasporas? 2. In
what way are these radiographies expressed considering that the discussion on race and racism
are still considered taboo in a country that expresses itself through the myth of racial
democracy? 3) Considering that anti-black racism is structural and structuring in Brazilian
society, is it possible to articulate counter-epistemic strategies in the field of the sensitive,
considering the tactics of anti-black racism permeated in the very heart of the visual arts? In
this way, I understand that the poetic-politics of black authorship in the field of visual arts
contribute to the elaboration of self-revealed critical x-rays of blackness, producing black
narratives and epistemes that contribute to the understanding of the field of studies of ethnicracial relations