'Tunga: Me, You and the Moon' at MALBA, Bueno Aires, Argentina
24 October 2024
From 25 October 2024 to 17 February 2025, Museo Malba in Buenos Aires, Argentina presents the installation Me, You and the Moon, one of the last works created by Tunga. A key figure in the Brazilian art scene of the late 20th century and part of a prolific generation of creators who followed in the footsteps of Lygia Clark and Hélio Oiticica, Tunga's career spanned a variety of techniques and mediums, through which he developed sculptures, installations, videos, performances, and drawings. His work, infused with literary, philosophical, and scientific references (such as mathematics, entomology, and medicine), incorporates mythology, fiction, and alchemical processes as central elements of his poetics.
Part of the Sarina Tang Collection, Me, You and the Moon brings together recurrent elements in his work, such as stones, mirrors, glass bottles, plaster, resin, and plates suspended on arcs and rods. The installation reflects his interest in archaeology, manifested through objects that register a kind of visual and molecular memory preceding human existence. For the artist, the presence of a fossilized tree trunk serves as a testament to nature before the colonizing presence of humans. It also constitutes a metaphor for the suspension of time; its hollowed-out form suggests the presence of a tunnel leading to a somatic perspective of reality, hinted at in some of the anticipatory drawings of this piece. The prehistoric water in crystal bottles also symbolizes the elixir of time.
Tunga's perspective on the coexistence of the organic and the artificial is also present in this work, through references to a metaphysical conception of corporeality. His fragmentary bodies—in this case, the patinated bronze sculptures representing thumbs—evoke the living as part of the ethereal dimension of existence: "that body, which is fleeting, configures and reconfigures itself according to our desire, according to the law of the continuity of desires," the artist once said. Me, You and the Moon stands as a key piece in his career, as it consolidates his anticipatory contributions to a post-humanist narrative.
The exhibition is complemented by a 2015 documentary film named after the installation, along with a series of 36 drawings from the Tunga Institute that, serving as a programmatic portrait, reveal his work with lines and incorporate visual notions of transformation and continuity into his narratives.