Under the Art in the Community Program

Gerson Fogaça & Pedro J. Gutiérrez at MoCAA

On May 10, 2024, the Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas (MoCAA) will inaugurate "At my Wit's End" (A Sangue no Algidá) by Brazilian artist Gerson Fogaça, born in Goiás in 1969, and Cuban writer and visual artist Pedro Juan Gutiérrez. This bilateral project is made possible through the collaboration of the Secretary of State for Culture of Goiás, the Goiânia Art Museum, and The Gaea Latin American Art Foundation, aimed at promoting Latin American and Caribbean Art.

Curated by Dayalis González Perdomo

May 10th - June 14th | 2024

The exhibition —curated by Dayalis González Perdomo— places special emphasis on the artistic productions of minority groups, focusing on racial and gender diversity, as well as sociological themes related to the protection and conservation of the environment. In 2025, Vila Cultural Cora Coralina and the Goiânia Art Museum, also supported by the Secretary of State for Culture of Goiás, will exhibit the Artescondido (Hidden Cuban Art) project: a representative selection of works from prominent artists residing in South Florida, part of the collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas.

Gerson Fogaça
Goiás, 1967

Fogaça is a Brazilian artist known for his decisive gestures, with work often focused on the interaction between different artistic languages. He comfortably navigates between literary and visual metaphors. This interaction has led him to exhibit alongside writers who share these reflections from literature, such as Cuban Pedro Juan Gutiérrez and Brazilian poet Nicolas Behr, to name a few. Typically working on large canvases, Fogaça allows creativity to flow unrestrained, depicting animals confined in a zoo, such as tapirs, urban elements like automobiles, and people who appear surrounded by a seemingly liberating reality that is often oppressive at its core. His resume includes participation in solo and group exhibitions in France, Spain, Argentina, Germany, and several Brazilian cities such as Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Brasília, and Goiânia.

Pedro Juan Gutiérrez
Matanzas, Cuba, 1950

He began to work when he was thirteen years old like a vendor of ice-creams and newspapers. He was a soldier, swimming and kayak instructor, agricultural worker, technician in construction, technical designer, radiostation speaker, and journalist for 26 years.Gutiérrez is author of several poetry books, and author of "Dirty Havana Trilogy", "El Rey de la Habana" (“The King of Havana”), "Tropical Animal" (winner of the Spanish prize Alfonso García Ramos 2000), the short stories book "Melancolía de los leones" (“Melancholy of the lions”), "The insatiable spiderman" (winner of the Italian prize Narrativa Sur del Mundo), "El nido de la serpiente" (“The snake nest”winner of the Prix des Amériques insulaires et de la Guyane 2008), "Our GG in Havana", and "Corazón mestizo" (“Mestizo heart”), a Cuban travel book.
His use of dirty realism has led some critics to call him the “Caribbean Bukowski”. Named master of "dirty realism", Gutiérrez depicts life in the shady alleys of Havana in a direct, visceral style.
His books describe contemporary Cuba from his semi-autobiographical perspective as a disillusioned journalist. Gutiérrez' narrative voice is skeptical, intellectual, humorous, crass, sardonic, and bluntly frank. His literary persona is chiefly concerned with escaping poverty and the pursuit of sex, rum, and writing.
Gutiérrez' stories are typically gritty, tragicomic accounts of himself and his countrymen hustling for money, searching for pleasure and happiness, and struggling in desperate situations. Most chapters incorporate heavy use of a form of irony. His stories illustrate the difficulty of achieving self-sufficiency and contentment in a dysfunctional and poverty-stricken society living under paternalistic government. Despite his grim depiction of many aspects of Cuban life, Gutiérrez' writing stresses his overriding love for Cuban culture. He frequently praises Cuban music, resourcefulness, and joie de vivre.
Gutiérrez writes scornfully of people who avoid risk and self-expression in exchange for smothering safety and boredom-inducing banality.
He lives in Havana where he shares literature with painting.

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