Hélio Oiticica's exhibition 'Waiting for the internal sun' opens today at De La Warr Pavilion

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Hélio Oiticica's exhibition 'Waiting for the internal sun' opens today at De La Warr Pavilion
Hélio Oiticica with Bólides and Parangolés at his atelier at Engenheiro Alfredo Duarte Street, Rio de Janeiro, 1965. Photo: Claudio Oiticica. Courtesy of César and Claudio Oiticica.



EAST SUSSEX.- Today, De La Warr Pavilion opens Hélio Oiticica: Waiting for the internal sun, the first major presentation of the artist’s work in a UK public institution for over 15 years. Hélio Oiticica (1937-1980) is widely regarded as one of Brazil's most prominent artists of the twentieth century and a touchstone for much contemporary art made since the 1960s. Through freewheeling, participatory artworks - cinematic installations, immersive environments, interactive objects and abstract paintings - Oiticica challenges us to engage with our surroundings in new and unexpected ways, stimulating our senses, emotions and physical bodies. This landmark exhibition, presented across DLWP's gallery spaces, will centre on the artist’s life and work throughout the late 1960s and 1970s, during which he spent brief stints in London and Sussex, and then an extended period in New York City before returning to Rio de Janeiro in 1978.

Developed in close collaboration with The Estate of Hélio Oiticica, the exhibition has been organised to coincide with the 50th anniversary of Oiticica and fellow artist Neville D’Almeida’s ground-breaking Cosmococa artworks first created in New York in the 1970s. DLWP will join venues including Parque Lage, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Lisson Gallery, New York, USA; Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art at SUNY New Paltz, USA; The Mistake Room, Los Angeles, USA, and Hunter College Art Galleries, New York, USA, in an international series of exhibitions celebrating the rich legacy of these site-specific artworks.

Radical and subversive, the Cosmococa environments form part of Oiticica’s wider concerns during this period, which come together under the rubric of ‘creleisure’, a term coined by the artist in 1969 as part of his desire to fuse art and life and reclaim leisure time from its exploitation under capitalism. DLWP’s First Floor gallery will be transformed into a recreation of Cosmococa/CC5 Hendrix War (1973). In what the artist termed a ‘quasi-cinema’ environment, this 360-degree installation comprises projection, sound, and suspended Brazilian hammocks for visitors to relax in. The space is soundtracked by iconic artist Jimi Hendrix’s album War Heroes, while slideshow images of the album cover, manipulated by overlaid line drawings made from cocaine powder, are projected onto the gallery walls. Not only reflecting the hedonistic avant-garde of New York during this era, the work also comments on transgression, corruption, and violence in 1970s America. The artists’ transformation of cocaine - a substance extracted from Latin America, where Oiticica was from - into a drawing pigment, comments on US imperialism within the region.

In the ground floor gallery, DLWP will present a recreation of Oiticica’s installation Projeto Filtro – For Vergara (1972) for the first time in the UK. An important example of Oiticica’s Penetrable artworks - in which the viewer is invited to enter and interact with the installation - Projeto Filtro takes us on a labyrinthine journey encountering translucent, coloured walls, sound recordings, live news streams, and an orange juice dispenser. Originally conceived for the Museu de Arte Moderna (MAM) in Rio de Janeiro, the artist described the work as a ‘game-joke-labyrinth-noise-sound-recorder transistor buzzer blender tv’ that parodies ‘the myth of work and of kitsch … that contaminates little Brazilian minds’.1 It can be read as the third ‘portrait’ of his native Brazil, alongside Tropicália (1966-67) and Subterranean Tropicália (1971), and is charged with the political context of Brazil’s military dictatorship from which Oiticica fled.

The immersive installations presented within the DLWP exhibition are accompanied by an archival section in the Ground floor gallery, bringing together photography, film and writings by the artist. This timeline will trace Oiticica’s time spent in London as he prepared his first international exhibition at The Whitechapel Gallery with curator Guy Brett, his residency at Sussex University in Brighton, and the years spent living in Manhattan throughout the 70s. The exhibition will also consider the different ways that queerness manifests throughout his artistic production and the liberationist feeling that ran through New York’s underground cultural scene at the time. This is evident in the 1973 slide projection work, Neyrótika, and a group of rarely seen Super 8mm films captured on the streets of New York and in the apartments frequented by Oiticica and fellow artists.

In our current climate, we are faced with a series of impending crises: those of our bodies, our ecologies and the systems that govern them. Within this context, the relevance of Oiticica’s ideas becomes clear, as he shifts our attention to the ways that we might negotiate an increasingly inhospitable world. Taking its title from his essay ‘The Possibilities of Creleisure’ (1970) in which Oiticica writes of lying ‘as if waiting for the internal sun, the non-representative leisure’, the exhibition highlights the enduring legacy of this trailblazing and visionary artist and the unique worlds that he created.

Oiticica’s work has been the subject of major recent museum exhibitions, including the critically acclaimed retrospective Hélio Oiticica: To Organize Delirium, which debuted at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Philadelphia in 2016 and travelled to the Art Institute of Chicago and the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2017. Hélio Oiticica: The Body of Color was exhibited at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston in 2006-2007 and in London at the Tate Modern in 2007. His work is included in the collections of numerous international institutions including Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Inhotim Centro de Arte Contemporãnea, Belo Horizonte, Brazil; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Museo de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain; Museu de Arte Moderna, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX, USA; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA; Tate Modern, London, UK; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, USA; the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; and the Pérez Art Museum Miami, FL, USA, among others. The Projeto Hélio Oiticica was established in Rio de Janeiro in 1980 to manage the artist’s estate.

De La Warr Pavilion
Hélio Oiticica: Waiting for the internal sun
September 23rd, 2023 – January 14th, 2024










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