Photographic essay dedicated to
Lina Bo Bardi's
Glass House. Armando Andrade Tudela outlines the relationship between the light, the building's structure and its close environment.
Glass House is a perfect example of the union of Modernism and Brazilian vernacular
architecture, and Bo Bardi's first production in
Brazil.
Published on the occasion of the artist's exhibition at Gallery Annet Gelink, Amsterdam, from May 26 to June 30, 2007.
Armando Andrade Tudela (born 1975 in Lima, Peru, lives and works between Berlin and Saint-Étienne, France) works with a wide range of media in order to explore the intersecting interfaces
between popular culture, politics and fine art. While frequently using the South American cultural and
historical context as his starting point, Andrade Tudela in fact focuses on complex systems of translation and
transference; how are aesthetic ideas assimilated and reactivated politically, or socially, at a local level? And more broadly speaking, how are ideasthemselves embedded within the fabric of geography and physical topography?
Andrade Tudela studied at Pontifícia Universidad Católica, Lima, Perú, The Royal College of Arts, London, and at the
Jan Van Eyck Akademie. He has had exhibitions at Macba (Barcelona), Frac Bourgogne, DAAD (Berlin), the Museo de
Arte de Lima, the Ikon Gallery (Birmingham), the FKV (Frankfurt) and the Kunsthalle Basel. He has taken part in the 2006 Sao Paulo Biennial and the 2006 Shanghai Biennial.