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Inaugurates the third exhibition of the Federal Call "Son Tus Museos"

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This Thursday 2 February the Buenos Aires Museum will premiere the third exhibition of the Federal Call "Son Tus Museos", this time by the artist Daniela Arnaudo.

Under the name "Below the whispers", the artist from Santa Fe will inaugurate the exhibition starting at 18 hours in the Defense compound 223, which will remain open until 9 of April.

On the other hand, on Friday 3 February at 17 the performance will take place “Defense Useless” and a chat with the artist, organized by the BA Museums area.

"Below the murmurs" can be seen on Mondays, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday 11 a 19 hours and saturday, Sundays and holidays from 11 a 20 hours. The entry will have a value of 100 pesos (minor 12 years do not pay access). While, there are discounts for students and retirees, while on Wednesday no income is charged.

 

“behind the eyelids”, one of the works

The call They are Your Museums | Visual Arts was aimed at artists from all over the country who presented projects to exhibit at the Buenos Aires Museum. The Painting disciplines participated, Drawing, Sculpture, installation, textiles, Photography, Video art and graphic arts.

The objective of the federal call is to make it possible to recognize the talent of artists from all over the country and provide them with tools to show their work in an individual exhibition in the city of Buenos Aires..

The three selected proposals were exhibited between August 2022 and March of 2023. Each exhibition will be accompanied by a Public Activities Program whose objective is the relationship of the participants with the community and with the artistic sector of the city of Buenos Aires.

Martina Magaldi, Director General of Heritage, Museos y Casco Histórico expressed his joy at "inaugurating the exhibition by Daniela Arnaudo and culminating with the first cycle of three federal exhibitions of the call 'Son tus Museos, Visual Arts' that were presented at the Buenos Aires Museum".

This call "opened the doors to artists from all over the country who had the opportunity to carry out their first individual exhibition in a museum in the City of Buenos Aires", Magaldi added, who also highlighted Arnaudo for "linking the performative with the textile in small and large-format works embroidered by hand".

For her part, the artist was happy for the fact of "having been selected" and also commented that this "is my first solo show in Buenos Aires and I feel excited, grateful because I love the city”.

“It seems important to me to mention that I am an artist from the province who decided to work from a small city, in addition to producing work, there is a lot of management work behind, to apply for research grants, creation, hold exhibitions and residences in other provinces, also other countries. The Buenos Aires museum is in a strategic place and I hope that many people from different places can see and learn about my work., I like that a lot", added the artist.

"Underneath the murmurs" is an exhibition that links textiles and performance. It is made up of large and small format works, all of them hand embroidered on sheets, handkerchiefs and folders, ancient. These materials – today a work support – were inherited from the artist's family. The embroidery technique was also transmitted from generation to generation.. In some pieces it incorporates artisan dyeing with natural dyes, ferrites, land; in others there are experiments with the cyanotype technique and artisanal sublimation.

About these noble materialities, commingle, of fragile warps due to the action of the passage of time, historically linked to women, plasma different hunting scenes, attacks, survival, death and much blood. The protagonists are animals that he extracts from an inventory of drawings created by his great-grandfather Bartolo in a used accounting notebook., around the year 1950. with these works, continues an imaginary conversation with their ancestors: copy their animals, but they mutate with subtle gestures of estrangement, building dramatic stories, of pain, death and persecution.

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