Year

Artists

Country

Materials

Partners

Maria Trabulo

Portugal

plasma cutting, painting, aluminium

Correntes d'escritas

Maria Trabulo

programme cycle 02 / Wake up the Statues

in Collaboration With: Marta Bernardes

Maria Trabulo (b. Porto, 1989) is a visual artist and researcher based in Porto (PT). Her multi-disciplinary practice examines the role that images and artifacts play in shaping both personal and collective historical narratives and the influence of politics in cultural narratives throughout history. Trabulo holds an MFA from the The University of Applied Arts Vienna (AUT) and is currently a Ph.D. Candidate at the School of the Arts – Universidade Católica in Porto, Portugal. Trabulo has exhibited extensively, and since 2012, has participated in artist residencies in Austria, Germany, Iran, Italy, France, Greece, Portugal, and Spain.

Recent solo and group exhibitions include: EDP Foundation’s New Artists Award 2022; Towards Gallery, Toronto (2021); CAA - Águeda Cultural Centre, (2021): Porto Municipal Gallery, Porto (2019); Deegar Platform, Tehran (2019); Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art (2018); Museum of Art, Architecture, and Technology, (MAAT) Lisbon, (2017); Neue Gallery - Tiroler Kunstlerschaft, Innsbruck (2017); Galerie UngArt, Vienna (2015); Nuno Centeno Gallery, Porto (2015); KARAT, Cologne (2013); and Super Tokonoma, Kassel (2012).

(This residency took place at the same time as artist Marta Bernardes’ residency, in partnership with Correntes D’escritas)

Wake Up the Statues 

Trabulo’s multi-disciplinary practice investigates the role that images and artifacts play in shaping the social, political, and cultural narratives that we tell ourselves as societies. Her work examines notions of remembrance, personal and collective histories, as well as the alteration and restitution of political images. 

Since 2018, Trabulo has been collaborating with two NGOs that archive photographic records of artifacts that have disappeared from Syria during the ongoing civil war. With so many of the objects being excavated and documented under duress, these databases often only contain partial records, usually consisting of a single, lo-res image while little is known about dimensions or materials. Working with The Day After (Istanbul) and the Syrian Heritage Archive Project (Berlin), Trabulo assists these networks of archeologists, historians, and museums to recover more information about each artifact, drawing upon oral histories and eyewitness accounts to create a more complete picture of this disappearing cultural heritage. 

Wake Up the Statues emerged as a response to this ongoing crisis. Recognizing that these digital artifacts are at risk of fading into obscurity, Trabulo has begun to convert some of the digital images into new sculptures, restoring them back into physical form. Prioritizing practicality over faithful reproduction, these modified artifacts are designed to be easily transported in the case of emergency. Through this contemporary re-interpretation, Trabulo pays tribute to the devastating loss suffered under this conflict while helping to render visible some of the many embedded stories and histories these artifacts contain 

Credits

collaboration with Marta Bernardes
partnership with Correntes D’escritas

format: cycle 02
resources: iron, painting, plasma cutting
photography: Bruno Lança and Towards gallery
video: Bruno Lança