March 2022
Swinguerra | Bárbara Wagner & Benjamin de Burca | Boston ICA
Swinguerra | Bárbara Wagner & Benjamin de Burca | Boston ICA

Time
March 31 (Thursday) - September 5 (Monday)
Location
Institute of Contemporary Art
25 Harbor Shore Drive Boston MA 02210
INFO
Boston Art Exhibition Institute of Contemporary Art 25 Harbor Shore Drive Boston MA 02210 03/31/22-09/05/22 Collaborating since 2011 Bárbara Wagner and Benjamin de Burca create works in video photography and installation that
INFO
Boston Art Exhibition
Institute of Contemporary Art
25 Harbor Shore Drive
Boston MA 02210
03/31/22-09/05/22
Collaborating since 2011 Bárbara Wagner and Benjamin de Burca create works in video photography and installation that explore contemporary histories of underground dance and musical genres. Frequently made in collaboration with cinematographer Pedro Sotero these moving-image works which they refer to as “documentary musicals” often center on urban subcultures in the South Atlantic diaspora from the Franco-Indo creole musical genre maloya to frevo dancers and brega singers in Recife Brazil where the artists live and work. Constructing images together with performers their approach merges the cinematic with the fictional documentary and ethnographic to address questions of surveillance visibility and creativity in an increasingly connected postcolonial world. A recent acquisition and room-filling installation on view for the first time Swinguerra (2019) focuses on disadvantaged queer communities of color in Recife Brazil with an emphasis on transgender and nonbinary performers. The film features three contemporary dance styles—swingueira brega funk and passinho da maloca—as performed by three competitive dance groups. These mixed dance styles recall Brazil’s colonial and slave trade history where music and dance functioned as discreet methods of organizing politically under oppressive regimes. Fast-paced athletic sexy dreamlike and aggressive the dance styles like the music make Swinguerra an exhilarating and unforgettable viewing experience illustrating how dance and music offer rich sources of agency resistance and community for marginalized individuals.
Note: Swinguerra contains a brief sequence of flashing light which may not be suitable for people with visual sensitivities.