Roberto Cabot |
* 1963 in Rio de Janeiro (BR), lives and works in Rio de Janeiro
There is something wrong about the digital prints from the series E-Scapes by Roberto Cabot. In the photo series, from which Favela Chic and The UNO building in NY with Sugar Loaf reflected are exhibited here, the media artist has assembled absurd city views: The Eiffel Tower, symbol of the European belief in progress of nineteenth-century industrialization, clashes with the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, which are structures of random growth built of boards from wooden boxes, metal canisters, palm tree branches, and similar stuff. In the facade of the UN headquarters in New York, an architectonic landmark for the attempt by hegemonic powers to create a political institution after World War II that would assure world peace, the 394-meter-high Sugarloaf Mountain of Rio de Janeiro is mirrored. Favela Chic, 2008 |