“4 DAYS OF CARNIVAL, 361 DAYS OF...”
By Gobira
The
Brazilian carnival is celebrated by the Brazilian and foreign
media alike as the biggest show on earth. To praise Brazilian
carnival, hundreds of pages will not cover all the beautiful
aspects of it.
The aim of the exhibition“4 days of carnival, 361 days
of...” is a bit different. The proposal is to look to
the pictures critically, thinking about the relationship between
Brazilian society and the carnival.
Generally, many Brazilian people say that carnival is a democratic
festival, without prejudices, a moment which reflects, at least
temporarily, the aspirations of the Brazilians poor. Can we
believe in such assertion?
I could say that in Brazilian society, intellectuals and artists
from a humble background have often betrayed revolutionary concerns
in the interest of maintaining class power.
Artists who taken into account the world where we live, cannot
be absent or away of the necessity of talking about the problems
related to this world.
The struggle of many teachers and intellectuals to tackle illiteracy
in Brazil has been enormous, although such task is far from
over. Know how to read and write is not enough, it is necessary
to understand and question what they are learning, and also
what it is being shown to them.
The Brazilian society is suffering the consequences of visual
illiteracy, present in all social classes, all over Brazil,
amongst people who have reached university and those ones who
never have been in a school class. Images as well as words transmit
an ideology and a way of thinking. The Brazilian society is
still authoritarian and the way images are presented is arbitrary,
quite often showing prejudice against blacks, Brazilian indigenous,
women and homosexuals.
The Carnival reveals the Brazilian cultural diversity, however
the festival has been an instrument to hide prejudices instead
of fight against it.
During the processions, photographers and the Brazilian and
the foreign television put their lens towards women, not to
the ordinary women but only to those they believe will symbolise
the beautiful of Brazilian women. But is necessary to question
if those women, many of them with silicone breast implants,
really represents the majority of Brazilian women. Who had taken
part or watched a carnival procession know that beautiful women
are a minority. It is necessary plurality and, that images do
not become imposed in a kind of aesthetic dictatorship, reinforcing
a chauvinist view of “beautiful and ‘yamy’
Brazilian women”.
The Homosexuals are gaining more and more space in the Brazilian
society, the moment is a promising one, barriers have been broken,
however it would be naïve to see Brazil as a country that
respects homosexuals. Brazil presents high levels of violence
against homosexuals.
With regard to Brazilian indigenous, they are characterised
as second class citizens. During carnival, rare are the moments
when indigenous are portrayed in a genuine way. For instance,
when the theme of one samba school includes or is related to
Brazilian history, the violence , the genocide suffered by different
Brazilian indigenous nations are forgotten.
What about Brazilian black people? Four days of carnival are
not enough to erase the daily prejudice against black people
in Brazil. The black people within Brazilian society do not
have the same work and education opportunities. Inside the samba
schools for instance, black people are normally placed amongst
percussionists. The rich costumes and the prominent positions
are reserved to white, and to national or foreign celebrities
whom can pay for that.
It is clear that the carnival is hiding the social prejudice
against the majority of Brazilian people. We are living in a
social dictatorship which has been dividing the country in two
groups: the haves and the have-nots.
The online exhibition “4 days of carnival and 361 days
of…” is an invitation from www.BrazilianArtists.net
for Brazilian, English and any other people who are interested
in the Brazilian culture and society. A society of many sides
and contradictions and a lot of work to be done.
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