La Brazilian visual artist Paula Scamparini look at cultural aspects as changing ecosystems.
Scamparini investigates the universe of the image from explorations with the Photography, sculpture, installation and interpretation language.
His artistic work places the landscape as a central element and uses it as a trigger for analysis, encounters and concern.
This creation of fictional spaces, sometimes legendary, allows a dialogue between narrative constructions, both imaginary and factual.
Her participation in residency programs or projects in different locations also stimulated her interest in transient dynamics and cultural interference.
Perceiving the diffusion of the different collective and spatial organizations Around the world, the artist born in Sao Paulo has awakened specific attention to the ways in which our social imaginaries are shaped.
Paula Scamparini's work reveals curiosities that visual and community systems debate, as well as the existence of individualities within these contexts.
Her installation "In the south, turtles do not age", carried out in Vienna, Austria, by the Austrian artist Sabine Groschup, contrasts the cultures of the two artists by addressing environmental issues in the so-called South.
The format of the installation refers directly to the industrial disaster that occurred in Minas Gerais on November 5, 2015, which seriously affected the Rio Doce, one of the country's main rivers, causing enormous ecological damage.
Your video installation Orun reveals the cultural belonging of Brazilians that is included in our star system, where looking at the sky is a kind of magic, which involves us in the dynamics of being, and where we find our own space, not only physically, but spiritually.