Born in Italy in 1942, Anna Maria Maiolino is at this time acknowledged as a number one determine in up to date artwork in Brazil and past. Along with her household, she left post-war Italy to settle first in Venezuela, after which Brazil, the place her youth had been formed by political instability and the Brazilian army dictatorship that held energy between 1964 and 1985.
Carefully related to the Nineteen Sixties Brazilian artwork actions of each New Figuration and New Objectivity, Maiolino developed a visceral creative language characterised by experimentation with easy supplies. Whether or not she is making gestural works on paper, movie installations, pictures, or sculpture in paper, cement and clay and—from the Nineteen Eighties—expansive clay installations, her work displays on exile, language and reminiscence.
Maiolino’s ANNA (1967)
Photograph © the artist; courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
In 2024, she gained the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement on the sixtieth Venice Biennale. This month sees the opening of her first solo exhibition in France, on the Musée Picasso, in Paris, which covers a profession of greater than 60 years and contains newly commissioned work.
The Artwork Newspaper: You might have chosen to name your first institutional exhibition in France Estou Aqui (I’m right here). What’s your pondering behind this title?
Anna Maria Maiolino: “I’m right here” serves as a response to a name, synonymous with “I’m current!” It refers back to the bodily presence of my artworks within the Musée Picasso in Paris.
Would you like your exhibition to be in dialogue with Picasso and his work?
Artwork manufacturing depends upon the historic interval during which it was produced. There’s an enormous age hole between me and Picasso, and you’ve got to remember the gender distinction. That being mentioned, we share a deep curiosity in regards to the train of freedom and using experimentation. We use completely different strategies for the creation of our artworks in an effort to resume our language.
You had been born and spent your early childhood in Italy, then moved to Venezuela, then Brazil. Between 1968 and the tip of 1971 you had been based mostly in New York, earlier than returning to Brazil the place you now dwell. How has transferring between so many locations, languages and identities performed into your work?
Since 2005, I’ve been dwelling and dealing in São Paulo, Brazil. It’s clear that leaving Calabria emigrate to Caracas in 1954, in addition to the opposite locations during which I skilled completely different cultures and humanities, left an enduring impression on my creativeness and, consequently, my creation.
You might have described your self as “a very contaminated artist”. What do you imply by that phrase?
I specific myself in an exaggerated means, like an individual from the south of Italy. In lots of senses, I really feel contaminated by life experiences. With every change of territory, new emotions and feelings modified the previous ones and on many events required that I rapidly adapt to a brand new state, retaining the expertise in my reminiscence, which additionally feeds my creation. I used to be born into a big Italian household. I used to be one among 9 kids and the final one to be born, in 1942, through the Second World Conflict. The reminiscence of my childhood accompanies me as a dwelling presence. My mom was 42 years outdated after I was born. She was born in 1900 and my father in 1896, so I’m an 83-year-old up to date artist with an training from a distinct time, inherited from my mother and father’ experiences and from the numerous presence of my eight older siblings. The cultures of the nations I bought to know undoubtedly left traces on my soul, so it’s protected to say that it’s not a query of contamination, however fairly of poetic affections.

Untitled (1997) from the E o que falta (and what’s lacking) sequence
Photograph: Everton Ballardin © the artist; courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
In 1989 you began utilizing clay for the primary time. Why did you flip to this materials, which you proceed to make use of, most notably in your Terra Modelada sequence? What are the qualities of clay that attraction to you? What objective does it serve that different supplies can not?
Altering mediums throughout these 65 years of artwork means increasing my creative discourse. Studying a brand new method brings a couple of new inner dialogue between mind and doing. In 1984, I discovered myself in a language disaster, trying to find a standard thread that may lead me again to optimism and to the invention of a brand new future. To dwell in a brand new period during which I might say no to the darkish moon of modernity and no to the right here and now of postmodernity, I looked for a brand new photo voltaic interval, a brand new start, with out fragments.
On the finish of 1989, I got here into contact with clay, and a brand new worldview emerged. Clay is earth, and earth is the paradigm of matter par excellence—it inherently carries the opportunity of kinds. That’s after I began making sculptural objects with the mould. Clay is key for its tactile prospects … and for the development of time when engaged on the primordial mass of earth.

Spherical and spherical: loops, as in Untitled (1993), are a recurring motif in Anna Maria Maiolino’s work
Photograph: Everton Ballardin © Anna Maria Maiolino; courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
In 1994, I started to make giant portions of clay with out firing it in situ. In these works, there is no such thing as a use of the symbolic or the allegorical, for the reason that intention is to be in an actual house, not an illusory one, as a result of they’re what they’re: working actions. By analogy, the viewer may discover meals or waste, however that’s not the purpose. All of the moist lots have similarities, which might mislead the much less attentive viewer. Nonetheless, these installations are metaphors for doing, for handbook labour, that time to the presence of the pleasurable fatigue that conspires in opposition to the mass manufacturing and commodification of labour in our shopper society.
You might have created a brand new site-specific set up for the Musée Picasso exhibition, titled In Precept, which is made out of clay. What has influenced/impressed the kinds that it takes?
The type of every new set up of Terra Modelada depends upon the quantity of clay and the house obtainable. The idea of all of them is at all times the identical: the demonstration of labor carried out.
When our ancestors, the primary hominids, stopped harvesting fruits with their mouths and developed using their arms, they turned the hand into the primary instrument. The expert man who inaugurated our cultures emerged. The segments that compose In Precept are sculptural objects produced by the primary primary hand gestures within the ordering of the clay and which join us with the start, the origin.
An intense and energetic physicality runs right through your work. Bodily allusions repeatedly act as a cipher of which means, whether or not as an instrument of resistance or a method of political/social critique in your early movie and performances. Then there are all of the bodily associations of the moulded, torn, rolled, kneaded—even seemingly excreted—kinds within the more moderen works, which all show highly effective proof of bodily gesture. It’s also obvious in your more moderen movies and performances. Why does this bodily, natural presence stay so essential to you?
I typically say that my physique speaks to me and that I’ve been listening to it since I used to be actually younger. Conscious of its physicality, it’s my physique that offers me my id and the assorted points of my life and creation. My physique is my most important instrument of creation, and in some points of my work, now we have its presence. It’s my physique that connects with my mind-soul and my actual environment, activating in me varied human points that give rise to the completely different psychological, poetic and political discourses in my work.
Language is one other factor that seems constantly in your work: in your personal writings, object books, and the spoken phrases and texts evident in your work—the Musée Picasso catalogue additionally accommodates your poetic writings. Are you able to speak in regards to the wealthy and varied methods during which your work is deeply rooted in, and knowledgeable by, language?
I’m a curious particular person, and as a curious particular person, I’m not knowledgeable; I’m an newbie who likes to experiment. In 1968, in New York, with two kids aged two and 4, the white sheet of paper grew to become a territory for scribbling notes and brief items of writing because it wasn’t doable to create bigger works.
I really feel that poetry is a cornerstone, a basis for any inventive act. It’s a mind-set in regards to the world in an operational motion to rework what we expertise into consciousness. I consider that poetry is inherent to the human being and that it drives the human evolutionary course of. This makes me assume with a sure delight in regards to the primordial chance of the existence of the “divine spark”. I’m the daughter of an Ecuadorian mom and a Calabrian father. My mom studied to be an Italian trainer and was a fantastic admirer of Dante, reciting him from cowl to cowl. After I was little, she would scold me along with his verses. And my father emphasised the idea that to study Italian effectively, it was sufficient to learn Manzoni’s I promessi sposi thrice in a row.
What did it imply to you to have gained the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement on the 2024 Venice Biennale?
It’s an encouragement to maintain working so long as my physique permits.

Bodily exercise captured in clay: Maiolino’s Untitled (1993) from the Cobrinhas No. 3 (little snakes)sequence
Photograph: Everton Ballardin © Anna Maria Maiolino; courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
You devoted your Golden Lion to “Brazilian artwork, to the nation that welcomed me”. What was it or is it in regards to the nature of Brazilian artwork that you simply needed to have fun?
Arriving in Rio de Janeiro in 1960 was decisive within the decisions I made in regards to the paths alongside which I might construct my art work. The results of the encounter with Brazilian artwork, concrete and sensorial at the moment, shaped the premise of my work within the Nineteen Seventies and, much more profoundly, the work I’ve been doing lately. It’s clear that, as an emigrant, I have fun the Brazil that welcomed me and enabled me to pursue my poetics. Brazilian artwork is robust, pulsating and made by way of the inventive act of freedom.
Biography
Born: 1942 Scalea, Italy
Lives and works: São Paulo
Training: 1960-61 Escola Nacional de Belas Artes, Rio de Janeiro; 1971 Pratt Institute
Key exhibits: 2019 Whitechapel Gallery; 2017 MOCA Los Angeles; 2014 Gwangju Biennale; 2012 Documenta 13; 1998 São Paulo Biennial 1967 MOMA Rio de Janeiro
Represented by: Hauser & Wirth; Galeria Luisa Strina
Anna Maria Maiolino: Estou aqui (I’m right here), Musée Picasso, Paris, 14 June-21 September








