Cildo Meireles
Supported by the Cildo Meireles Exhibition Supporters Group and The Henry Moore Foundation
14 October 2008 – 11 January 2009
Tate Modern, Level 4, open every day from 10.00 – 18.00 and until 22.00 on Friday and Saturday
For public information number please print 020 7887 8888
Tate Modern
Level 4
Tuesday 14 October 2008 – Sunday 11 January 2009
Admission £8 (
Free with gallery admission concessions)
Opening hours:
Sunday to Thursday, 10.00–18.00. Friday and Saturday, 10.00–22.00. Last admission into exhibitions 17.15 (Friday and Saturday
21.15).
Public information number: 020 7887 8888.
Public information URL:
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/cildomeireles/default.shtm
Press release: 13 October 2008
The Brazilian artist Cildo Meireles (b. 1948) is widely recognised as one of the leaders in the international development
of Conceptual art. This exhibition is the first extensive presentation of the artist’s work in the UK. Revealing how he is
particularly fascinated by scale, the works range from an object in the form of a small ring to an installation covering 225
square metres. Tate has also brought together eight of Meireles’s iconic, immersive installations, six of which have never
been seen in the UK before.
Meireles has made some of the most philosophically brilliant, politically telling and aesthetically seductive works in recent
art. Since the late 1960s he has created sculptures and installations which involve an element of participation. His deep
interest in the relationship between the sensorial and the cerebral, the body and the mind, is now seen as one of the defining
characteristics of the post-war Brazilian avant-garde, out of which Meireles emerged with his early works at the end of the
1960s. He has remained loyal to these origins, and to a political and ethical viewpoint formed outside the so-called cultures
of plenty.
Among the highlights are eight large-scale installations. These include Through (Através) 1983-9, a labyrinth of barriers which the viewer is invited to navigate and at the heart of which shines a vast ball of crumpled
cellophane, Clear Sphinx. Another is Red Shift (Desvio para o Vermelho) 1967-84, which has been loaned from Collection Inhotim Centro de Arte Contemporânea in Brazil. Comprising three rooms, the
audience is invited into an all-red apartment filled entirely with red objects and the led through a darkened corridor to
a room with a pool of red liquid on the floor and a sink running with red water. Babel 2001, a gigantic tower of more than 800 radios, all tuned at low volume, forms a startling yet complex contemporary take
on the mythical tower of the world’s languages. The exhibition ends with Volatile(Volatile) 1980-94/2008, a multi-sensory environment through which visitors are invited to walk, which plays with our response to danger,
real or imagined.
Early work in the exhibition includes Meireles’s Geographical Mutations (Mutações Geográficas) and Physical Art (Arte Física) pieces 1969, reflections about distance and borders in relation to the vast land of Brazil.His Condensations (Condensado) series also features, small works that demonstrate that the potency of an art work is not restricted to its size. The artist
further explores space and scale in his drawing series on graph paper, Virtual Spaces: Corners (Espaços Virtuais: Cantos) 1967-8. Meireles’s celebrated Insertions into Ideological Circuits 1970, by which he devised a method to disseminate messages of protest under the military dictatorship in Brazil, and his
Zero Dollar/Zero Cruzeiro project 1978-84 and 1974-78, are also exhibited together with smaller-scale philosophical objects dealing with questions
of perception such as Dark Light 1982.
The exhibition is curated by writer and curator, Guy Brett and Vicente Todolí, Director Tate Modern, with Amy Dickson, Assistant
Curator, Tate Modern, and is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. The exhibition will travel to the Museu d’Art Contemporani
de Barcelona 11 February – 26 April 2009, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston 7 June – 27 September 2009, Los Angeles County
Museum of Art 22 November 2009 – 7 February 2010 and the Art Gallery of Ontario 27 March – 27 June 2010.
A film about the life and work of Cildo Meireles, produced by Tate Media in association with Arts Council England and ITV
Productions, has been directed by BAFTA award winning film maker, Gerald Fox. The film will be screened on The South Bank
Show at 10.35 on Sunday 26 October.
For further information contact Ruth Findlay/Bomi Odufunade, Tate Press Office, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG Call 020 7887 8731/4941
Fax 020 7887 8729, Email pressoffice@tate.org.uk