Gabriela Albergaria

Learn about the artist's universe through a text accompanied by a selection of works from the exhibition “All I want – Portuguese women artists from 1900 to 2020”

By Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation

Text by Lígia Afonso / Plano Nacional das Artes

Soquence 358 (2019/2020) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Private Collection

Gabriela Albergaria's work proposes a cosmovision based on the primacy of nature and on the need for its experience, investigation, revitalisation and cultural reconstruction. Through means including sculpture, installation, photography and drawing, her works propose the repair and healing of plant ecosystems weakened by a process of systematic destruction. Her work pushes back against the finiteness of natural resources with the creative and experimental power of art.

Soquence 358 (2019/2020) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Private Collection

She recreates compositions in which drawings complete or imagine missing parts of landscape photographs, in which sculptures rebuild trees that are already dead or condemned to removal.

Soquence 358 (2019/2020) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Private Collection

Soquence 358, 2019-2020
Inkjet print on fabric, acrylic paint on paper Heritage Woodfree Bookwhite 315 g
101 x 100 cm
Private Collection

Couche sourde (2010/2020) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Collection Gabriela Albergaria and Galeria Vera Cortês

Couche sourde, 2010-2020
Earth, tree branches, pressed
Variable dimensions
Collection Gabriela Albergaria and Galeria Vera Cortês

Tree cut into cubes and aligned (2019/2020) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Courtesy of the Artist and Galeria Vera Cortês

Tree cut into cubes and aligned, 2019-2020
Wood from a tree felled in Monsanto Forest Park, Portugal
49 x 847 x 49 cm
Courtesy of the Artist and Galeria Vera Cortês

Book of leaves (2015) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Collection Anne and António Castro Freire

Gabriela Albergaria highlights, collects, groups, classifies, catalogues and manipulates natural specimens, revealing their diversity. She makes use of the colours, shapes and representations of these specimens' constituent elements, transforming and decontextualising them to narrate a sensory and subjective experience, but also an aesthetics and politics of landscape.

Book of leaves (2015) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Collection Anne and António Castro Freire

She is interested in ecology, the history of gardening and the domestication of nature, botany and landscape architecture. Guided by a critical vision of the historical processes of appropriation, exploitation and acculturation of the natural world, Gabriela Albergaria subliminally appeals to an organic union with living nature.

Book of leaves (2015) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Collection Anne and António Castro Freire

Book of leaves, 2015
Cardboard, paper, coloured pencil on paper
21 x 13 cm (folded)
Collection Anne and António Castro Freire

Wall piece (2015) by Gabriela AlbergariaOriginal Source: Courtesy of the Artist and Galeria Vera Cortês

Wall piece, 2015
Bronze
8 x 20 x 15 cm
Courtesy of the Artist and Galeria Vera Cortês

Credits: Story

Selection of works presented at the exhibition All I want: Portuguese women artists from 1900 to 2020, in its first moment at Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon, within the scope of the cultural program that takes place in parallel to the Portuguese Presidency of the Council of the European Union 2021.

Exhibition organized by the Portuguese Ministry of Culture, Directorate-General for Cultural Heritage (DGPC) and the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, in co-production with the Center of Contemporary Creation Olivier Debré, Tours, and with the collaboration of the Plano Nacional das Artes (Portugal).

Curators:
Helena de Freitas and Bruno Marchand


Text by Lígia Afonso / Plano Nacional das Artes
Selection of online resources Maria de Brito Matias


Learn more about Gabriela Albergaria's works presented in the context of this exhibition:
All I want: Le Vivant

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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Over 240 artworks by more than 40 women: Explore the new exhibition celebrating Portuguese women artists from 1900 to 2020
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