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at some point, be seen by the public. As critical subjects of our time, we<br />

need to create new spaces and technologies to face the great challenges<br />

and dilemmas which today call on us to reflect. A contemporary art<br />

museum is seen not as an object, but as a process, as something under<br />

permanent construction and interaction. A museum that is not only<br />

built of exhibits, but also made of its exhibitions. A museum primarily<br />

concerned with the formation of audiences. And for this action to be<br />

effective, it needs to be built with the community. A museum made with<br />

projects and partnerships transcends utopia to become a concrete reality.<br />

A place that can be seen and reviewed, where artists and the public can<br />

discover each other, recognizing themselves as equal in differences.<br />

In this sense, this publication we have in hand represents a new dawn,<br />

awakening the curiosity of those who want to learn something every day and<br />

ask: what museum is this? What is this place proposing an exchange of views<br />

and bringing us a panorama of the world of art? A collection of academic<br />

and non-academic nature, polyphonic, multifaceted, prismatic, revealing the<br />

complexity of contemporary Brazil. This is why we cannot disconnect from<br />

our museums. If art is a way of relating to the world, to others, and, above<br />

all, to ourselves, we can perceive it as a starting point in developing a more<br />

sensitive and critical viewpoint, with autonomy and creativity. Cataloging<br />

this collection, especially during this moment of the maintenance of<br />

artistic spaces during a pandemic, a time in which we feel it impossible to<br />

live without art and culture, means assuming a collective responsibility to<br />

manage this heritage. Continuing to ignore this could be devastating.<br />

To be the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rio Grande do Sul, we<br />

need to awaken in people the desire to see, know, live and be art itself. Our<br />

project needs to maintain, in addition to an artistic outlook, also a social one.<br />

And more than just being in tune with reality, we need to live it and reinvent<br />

it. Anywhere we go we can easily see creation, and when we see it, we need<br />

to be involved with it. Therefore, creating and guaranteeing the existence<br />

of this museum is more than just creating visibility for the visual arts, is a<br />

political act in which we not only perceive what exists, but also recognize<br />

and participate in its creation. You need to have your own file to preserve<br />

memory, and <strong>MACRS</strong> is the home of contemporary art, it is our home,<br />

awaiting us and asking where art belongs and where we belong. For this<br />

reason, we thank the artists and friends of the Museum, the companies and<br />

partner institutions who have, throughout these three decades, supported<br />

the construction of this place of questioning. All the experiences leading<br />

to this point have been valuable and rewarding learnings in the collective<br />

effort to carry out this institutional mission. This cataloging project provided<br />

us with a professional and emotional coexistence demonstrating the care<br />

and creativity that keep this museum alive, coupled with the confidence of<br />

those who work and fight in the fields of art and culture.<br />

The Catalogue of works is the result of an independent project,<br />

financed through funds from the Cultural Emergency Law, Aldir Blanc,<br />

which courageously and responsibly provided all of the professionals who<br />

participated in it with the same respect and appreciation the community<br />

has for the various works of the artists who make up this collection.<br />

Coordinated by cultural producer Vera Pellin, researcher and professor<br />

Maria Amelia Bulhões and her group of fellows, together with the Museum’s<br />

qualified team and assisted by specialists in the areas of architecture,<br />

design, photography and the press, the catalogue highlights the totality of<br />

<strong>MACRS</strong> works, making this heritage accessible through the website, from<br />

now on occupying a prominent place in the life of the institution.<br />

This publication is a strong indicator of the consistency of the<br />

Museum, of rescuing the biography of the artists, donors, managers,<br />

servants, interns and collaborators who have highlighted this history,<br />

from its beginning until today, for future generations. Contemporary art<br />

in RS is present in all the strength of its production, realized by the 1,813<br />

works of 921 artists, most from the last four decades, varying according to<br />

the plastic-visual languages ​and assuming multiple forms. The Museum<br />

of Contemporary Art of Rio Grande do Sul has the honour of presenting<br />

its Catalogue of works, an indispensable publication to everyone wanting<br />

to know more about contemporary art. A collection which for the first<br />

time will be made available in all its breadth; above all, it is the images<br />

presented here that outline this story.<br />

PATHS TRAVELLED<br />

Maria Amelia Bulhões<br />

How could we develop this project considering the Museum of<br />

Contemporary Art of Rio Grande do Sul and its collection without<br />

focusing on understanding some aspects of contemporary art? Art in<br />

which all methods are equivalent in a complex coexistence, allowing<br />

objects from different fields to be integrated into the artistic circuit<br />

through unlimited strategies.<br />

The artistic categories, long restricted to painting, sculpture and<br />

architecture, were expanded in modern times, incorporating drawing,<br />

printmaking and photography. However, the scenario has become much<br />

more diverse, through the crossing of several categories into objects that<br />

become difficult to classify. By cultivating approximations with the banal,<br />

by replacing finished work with documents of the work in process and by<br />

adopting hybridism as an aesthetic proposal, a new paradigm is established.<br />

Artists seek more direct forms of interaction with the public, using everyday<br />

objects and themes. Contradictorily, however, even when focused on<br />

the involvement of the viewer, contemporary art needs the presence of<br />

mediating devices (or instruments), such as monitors, texts on the wall or<br />

books on the artist in the exhibit space. This is because the vast majority of<br />

people recognize only the traditional paradigms of art and have difficulty<br />

understanding what is being proposed in the contemporary context. It is<br />

evident some artists desire and make efforts to leave the system, considering<br />

it restrictive and asphyxiating of their creativity. However, by breaking with<br />

the traditions of art history and aesthetics, by abandoning the shelter of<br />

artistic categories and ripping the contours of a socially recognized space,<br />

they move between transgression and assimilation. As Néstor García<br />

Canclini says, “The history of contemporary art is a paradoxical combination<br />

of behaviours dedicated to securing the independence of its field and others<br />

obstinate in overcoming the limits that separate it” (CANCLINI, 2012, p. 23).<br />

For the development of these analyzes on contemporary art in Rio<br />

Grande do Sul, I use a conceptual model examining these practices<br />

through a network of relationships, involving the artists, critics, gallery<br />

owners and institutions in a complex art system 1 . As this production is<br />

increasingly international through circuits of fairs, biennials, and large<br />

institutions and yet, paradoxically, more local in the construction of<br />

relationships with realities and private societies, I incorporate the ideas of<br />

Bruna Fetter on art ecosystems:<br />

...a series of connected, overlapping, interlocking, and<br />

intersecting art systems having different scales, geographic<br />

locations and levels of power to interfere with the system itself.<br />

So, instead of thinking about a great art system, represented<br />

by actors from the global mainstream and removed from local<br />

realities, I defend the current use of the term in the plural, and<br />

always local way... (FETTER, 2018, p. 112)<br />

It is possible to perceive that the crisis of the great stories 2 supporting<br />

the history of western art, of its European base, opened possibilities for<br />

artists to create micro-narratives focused on their own universes and<br />

histories, to account for the multiple subjectivities in the different worlds<br />

dispersed throughout the terrestrial globe. However, in peripheral regions<br />

such as Rio Grande do Sul, the situation of contemporary art is problematic<br />

and complex, since the local ecosystem is rarefied, it does not have<br />

a strong social presence, nor a solid market and lacks the consolidated<br />

institutions to support artists. This structure does not enjoy much support<br />

in society; art is considered by many a sign of status, not stimulating to<br />

the imaginations of most people. A great ambiguity is created in the<br />

relationships of contemporary artists to the different instances of this<br />

circuit. How is it possible to criticize and subvert this fragile local ecosystem<br />

without overthrowing it completely and thus failing to be recognized as<br />

an artist? This is a complex question.<br />

Thus, I would like to highlight that the development of contemporary<br />

art in Rio Grande do Sul was a slow and discontinuous process, beginning<br />

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