Mimesis International: Art
Imagining the heavens across Eurasia. From antiquity to early modernity
Libro: Libro rilegato
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2024
pagine: 544
Imagining the heavens across Eurasia. From antiquity to early modernity
Libro: Libro in brossura
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2024
pagine: 544
From the visual to the visionary. Surrealist trajectories in art
Libro: Libro in brossura
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2024
pagine: 326
Leonora Carrington. The image of dreams
Giulia Ingarao
Libro: Libro in brossura
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2022
pagine: 208
Great art critics (1750-2000). Emergence and development of a profession in permanent crisis
Jesús Pedro Lorente
Libro
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2020
pagine: 192
Tangible whispers, neglected encounters. Histories of East-West artistic dialogues. 14th-20th century
Marco Musillo
Libro
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2019
pagine: 268
Hudinilson Jr. Scrapscapes of resistance. Queer desires, haptic gazes, scrapscapes of becoming
Simone Rossi
Libro: Libro in brossura
editore: Mimesis International
anno edizione: 2026
pagine: 218
This book offers a sustained study of Hudinilson Jr.’s Cadernos de Referên-cias, more than 130 notebooks produced in São Paulo between the early 1980s and 2013. Rather than treating them as personal objects or marginal artefacts, it approaches the Cadernos through the lens of low theory, consid-ering scrapbooking as a generative practice situated between visual culture, media, and contemporary art. By introducing the notion of scrapscape, the book describes the Cadernos as unstable terrains emerging from the circula-tion and residue of mass media. Within these terrains, cutting, photocopy-ing, collecting, and tactile handling operate as ways of thinking with images. Scrapbooking is not approached as a genre, but as an undisciplined method rooted in proximity, repetition, and minor gestures, where attention, desire, and practices of self-imaging take form across surfaces, reopening the ques-tion of Narcissus beyond the logic of mere reflection. Situating Hudinilson Jr.’s practice within the Brazilian cultural landscape of the late dictatorship and the political period of abertura, the book reads the Cadernos in relation to xerox art, mail art, underground publishing, and urban interventions that re-configured the uses of the body and mass media. Rather than approaching them as an archive of images, it frames them as a practice of dis-production: a daily, haptic, and intimate labour through which fragments of visual and material culture are reworked into a slow process of self-design, resistance, and becoming.

