cristina de middel

Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013


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Party, 2013



“If there is to be a revolution there must be a party”. This is how one of the most iconic and politically engaged book of the century would start if we applied an intentional filter. This filter would hide the parts of the slogans and sentences that eventually got obsolete in the last decades. The book is the Little Red One: “Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung”, the second most printed book in History (after the Bible) that can only be found nowadays in China in tourist shops. In an attempt to build a documentary object that pushes the limits of documenting with images, the series “Party” presents a deliberately personal approach to contemporary Chinese society and adds layers of significance by choosing a loaded platform. Using censorship to erase the parts of the text that are no longer in use in the country’s routine, the resulting pages become a script where matching images build a series of diptychs that vehemently raise the question of the real nature of Communism in modern China.

The combination of this manipulated text and image pairs pieces of information that aim to portray China empathetically, appealing to our own clichés towards the country and their bipolar political structure. The series reproduce the matching pages of the book “Party” published by RM and the Archive of Modern Conflict and combine serigraphs of the censored texts with images captured by the artist Cristina De Middel during her trips to China.

Again the artist explores the boundaries and limits in the use of the photographic image to build truthful graphic testimonies and to raise the debate about the construction of the opinion and History and the role that photography has been playing so far.

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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015


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Sharkification, 2015



Rio de Janeiro has been in the spotlight last year and will be present also during 2016 after the World Cup and the coming Olympics. This generated a sudden domestic interest for cleaning the international perception of the city; an image that could hardly avoid the recent “cleaning” campaign from the government in the favelas.

The UPP (Unidade de Policia Pacificadora) was created back in 2007 as a result of the change in the strategy to fight the increasing violence in these neighbourhoods known to be controlled by drug traffickers. It was the response from the government to the recent move of the narcos from the North to the much more visible and fashionable South Zone (Zona Sul) and the attractive territories where some of the most popular favelas, like Rocinha and Vidigal are located. What sounded like a perfect solution with the integration of the police force in the streets (avoiding a military approach to the problem) became a make-up trap for the inhabitants of the favelas. Now considered suspects by default, their daily routine has become even more insecure and constitute a muted voice.

The debate around the legitimacy and benefits of the UPP is open more than ever in Rio de Janeiro. It is a classical debate between rich and poor, legal and illegal, good and bad; and with this project, Sharkification, my intention is to open up that stalled discussion. I decided to compare the dynamics of the favelas to a coral reef, focusing on the complicated but logical ecosystem forged between divergent forces.

I used a blue handmade plastic filter and placed it in front of the lens to add an underwater effect that could convey my approach. Turning the police into sharks, hunting for survival, and the civilians into small fish that use camouflage strategies to survive; supporting my aim to bring some fresh air to the debate but also to build a portrait of the community that does not feed the black and white cliché of the favelas that we are used to consume.

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