All images © Felipe de Ávila Franco. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission from the artist is obtained.
All images © Felipe de Ávila Franco. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission from the artist is obtained.
Supported by:
Supported by:
Installation, 2010 Asphalt collected pieces Variable dimensions
Sculpture, 2010 Bricks, mirrors, iron tap, water, and electro-mechanics 60x50x40cm
Sculpture, 2010 Wood, aluminum, brass, galvanized and bricks 180x180x50cm
Sculpture, 2010 Chemically aged steel sheet 65x80cm
Installation, 2010 Bricks, crushed bricks, wood frame and glass 120x180cm
Installation, 2010 Asphalt collected pieces Variable dimensions
Sculpture, 2010 Bricks, mirrors, iron tap, water, and electro-mechanics 60x50x40cm
Sculpture, 2010 Wood, aluminum, brass, galvanized and bricks 180x180x50cm
Sculpture, 2010 Chemically aged steel sheet 65x80cm
Installation, 2010 Bricks, crushed bricks, wood frame and glass 120x180cm
Provoked Archaeologies #2
Installation, 2019
Excavated soil in the Amazonia rainforest, branches, and sisal rope
Variable Measures
Real
Sculpture, 2015
Coin, steel, polystyrene, and electro-mechanics
70x90x180cm
Real, 2015
This work presents a reflective black surface that hides an electromechanical system that allows a coin to keep spinning constantly in balance. A spinning coin relates to the power of choice and decision and questions to whom it belongs to. The potentiality of the fall indefinitely prolongs the decision moment and reiterates that what we consider to be a result of chance, can also be a cause and not only a consequence.
The cancellation of the possibility of decision produces a system where the individual is subjected to a perpetual suspension, spinning-steady under agreed rules that often do not correspond to the needs of daily life or either to the reality of the natural cycles. Such as economy, the reliability of this mechanical spinning coin system is extremely fragile, once it is set up through mechanical principles that can only operate over this styrene sheet, a polymer material produced from the synthetic processing of fossil resources.
Real is the name of the Brazilian official currency.