El sueño de Mirra

Brazilian artist Regina Silveira presents “El sueño de Mirra y otras constelaciones”, an exhibition at Museo Amparo featuring a site-specific intervention and other works.

El sueño de Mirra
Regina Silveira’s El sueño de Mirra is a site-specific intervention for the crystal cube of the lobby of Museo Amparo, where through visual metaphor she transforms and resignifies this space.
Using animal designs taken from popular imagery of Puebla and worked on a grand scale on adhesive vinyl enlarged to the point of almost reaching abstraction, the artist recreates a monumental embroidery on cross-stitch integrated into the walls of the Museum. Added to this giant embroidery are needles and threads meant to reflect a work in progress.
El sueno de mirra
Regina Silveira, El sueño de Mirra (detail), printing and vinyl cut, 600 sqm aproximalety
The intervention is entitled El sueño de Mirra, alluding to the China Poblana, a princess named Mirra brought from Asia to Puebla and to whom through the ages this type of embroidery has been associated. The cross-stitch pattern on which Silveira chose to present the design of the embroidery reveals designs from the region, imaginarily seeking to remake and use its glass walls as a giant textile, thus reaffirming Poblano identity.
El sueno de mirra
Regina Silveira, El sueño de Mirra (detail), printing and vinyl cut, 600 sqm aproximalety
Regina Silveira also presents in three galleries of the Museum a constellation of 12 scale models and 6 videos of her projects in various parts of the world. The scale models function as strategies of permanence in her interventions, always temporary. Motifs of shadows and footprints are common among the images inscribed on buildings, confronting the arrogant grandeur and permanence of ambitious constructions with the fleeting inconsequence of the temporary: footprints, tire paths, a bright reflection, a shadow, pawprints, and clouds.
El sueno de mirra
Regina Silveira, El sueño de Mirra (detail), printing and vinyl cut, 600 sqm aproximalety
Complementing the scale models, the work Mundus Admirabilis – shown for the first time in the exhibition Jardines de Poder” in Brasilia – is also presented. This work, using poisonous insects taken from treatises on natural history isolated in a great cage, is a metaphor referring to political life in Brasilia and specifically to the fight for power and to corruption.

until May 26, 2014
Regina Silveira
El sueño de Mirra y otras constelaciones

Museo Amparo
2 Sur 708,  Centro Histórico, Puebla, México

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