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Arte Correio. Hoje, a arte é este comunicado [Mail Art. Today, Art is this Communiqué]
Arte Correio. Hoje, a arte é este comunicado [Mail Art. Today, Art is this Communiqué]

Arte Correio. Hoje, a arte é este comunicado [Mail Art. Today, Art is this Communiqué]

Primary (Recife, Brazil, 1949–)
NationalityBrazilian, South America
Date1985
MediumPostcard. Printed matter and stamp
DimensionsAdditional Dimension: 4 1/8 × 5 7/8 in. (10.5 × 15 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Gift of Jacqueline Barnitz, 2017.85.a-b
Rights Statement
Collection AreaPrints and Drawings
Object number2017.85.a-b
On View
Not on view
Label Text
Paulo Bruscky was one of the foremost pioneers of Mail Art in Brazil. Mail Art is a form of expression in which artists hijack the postal service itself as a readymade artistic medium, adopting the post as an international communication network to be manipulated for creative ends. Bruscky had a militant stance towards this practice during Brazil’s military dictatorship (1964–1985). As he wrote in 1976, “In Mail Art, art has reclaimed its principal functions: information, protest, and denunciation.”
 
Whether playful or political in tone, Mail Art served Bruscky as a means of escaping censorship under a repressive dictatorial regime, as well as a potent tool for building a community of collaborators far from his small city of Recife. For his Ao remetente series, he sent letters to people around the world at erroneous addresses; undeliverable, they were eventually returned to him. The artist combined the diverse postal markings they accumulated on their circular journeys through the postal network into a collage that he photocopied and then sent as another mail artwork. Bruscky’s impulse to probe the postal system’s bureaucratic machinations is a constant feature of his transgressive artistic practice.

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