MASP
logo-MASP
  • TICKETS
  • EXHIBITION
  • Store
  • Support
  • Calendar

  • Search

  • PT/EN
close-icon
  • Meus dados
  • Sair
  • logo-MASP
  • SUPPORT
  • VISIT
    • CALENDAR
    • GETTING HERE
    • GROUP SCHEDULING
    • HOURS
    • MASP restaurant A Baianeira
    • MASP CAFÉ
    • MASP STORE
    • TICKETS
  • COLLECTION
    • ARTWORK LOANS
    • CONSERVATION AND RESTORATION
    • EXPLORE THE COLLECTION
    • IMAGE REQUESTS
    • SEARCH THE COLLECTION
  • Research Center
  • EXHIBITIONS
    • CURRENT
    • FUTURE
    • PAST
    • ANNUAL SCHEDULE
  • PUBLIC PROGRAMS
    • ART AND DECOLONIZATION
    • DIALOGUES IN THE COLLECTION
    • GROUP SCHEDULING
    • LECTURES
    • MASP Talks
    • MASP TEACHERS
    • SEMINARS
    • WORKSHOPS
  • COURSES
    • ALL
    • TEACHERS' SCHOOLARSHIPS
  • STORE
  • BECOME A MEMBER
  • ART EDITIONS
  • SHOWS AND EVENTS
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • ABOUT MASP
    • ANNUAL REPORTS
    • CONTACT-US
    • Expanding MASP
    • Masp Endowment
    • FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    • GOVERNANCE
    • MEET THE TEAM
    • PARTNERS AND SPONSORS
    • Social Statute
    • SUPPORT MASP
    • SUSTAINABILITY
    • WORK WITH US
    • YOUR EVENT AT MASP
    • KEEPING IT MODERN GRANT
  • MUSEUM MAP
  • PT/EN

Sheroanawe Hakihiiwe: All This Is Us

6.30 – 9.24.2023

SHARE

Sheroanawe Hakihiiwe (Sheroana, Venezuela, 1971) is a Yanomami artist who has been producing drawings, monotypes, and paintings since the 1990s. His delicate, abstract, and minimal artistic language uses straight lines, organic curves, dots, circles, triangles, zigzags, arcs, and crosses. Hakihiiwe lives in Mahekoto-Theri, a Yanomami community in the city of Alto Orinoco, in the Venezuelan state of Amazonas, which borders the Brazilian states of Roraima and Amazonas. The artist actively watches nature and the daily life of his community, recording in a notebook what he finds, learns, and uncovers in body and face paintings, shamanistic chants, traditional knowledge about animals, the medicinal aspects of plants, as well as the patterns his people use in their material culture. These notebooks are like archives, which help Hakihiiwe collect his graphic memories of life in the forest. His notes are later transferred to sheets of paper on which he adds colors, patterns, repetitions, and textures.

Hakihiiwe’s work intends to preserve, care, archiving, and translation of images and materials of community cultural values, producing drawings that depict Yanomami cosmology and form a true inventory of the immaterial heritage of his people. Most of the drawings and monotypes in this exhibition were produced on handmade paper with fibers such as sugarcane, cotton, mulberry, banana, and corn.

With 48 works, this show bears the subtitle Ihi hei komi thepe kamie yamaki [All This Is Us], proposed by Hakihiiwe to embody the diversity of elements that form his community and its surroundings. For the artist, “All this is us” means “all that is there in the jungle. We all live there, and it’s not just us. There are big rivers, big lagoons, all the animals, and the insects. I recover everything that is there where I live.”

Sheroanawe Hakihiiwe’s show is part of MASP’s 2023 program devoted to Indigenous Histories, which includes exhibitions of the MAHKU collective (Huni Kuin Artists’ Movement), Carmézia Emiliano, Paul Gauguin (1848–1903), the MASP Landmann Long-Term Loan of Pre-Columbian Art, Melissa Cody, as well as the large group show Indigenous Histories.

Sheroanawe Hakihiiwe: All This Is Us is curated by André Mesquita, Curator, and David Ribeiro, Curatorial Assistant

INSTALLATION VIEWS

Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus Photo: Isabella Matheus

CONNECT WITH US

logo-MASP

AV Paulista, 1578
01310-200 São Paulo-Brasil
+55 11 3149 5959
CNPJ 60.664.745/0001-87

  • ABOUT MASP
  • PRESS
  • CONTACT US