This unprecedented catalogue collects over 300 pieces reated by Adriano Costa  over three decades, listed in alphabetical order—titles are a key part of Costa's works—, alongside new writing by Fernanda Brenner and Milovan Farronato, two critics who have long followed and championed the artist's practice.
	
	
		In his practice Adriano Costa (born 1975 in  São Paulo, Brazil) has embodied a   playful yet critical approach to materiality, form, and social context.   Working primarily with found and everyday objects, the artist transforms   discarded materials—such as fabrics, furniture, metal, and plastic—into   sculptural assemblages that question notions of value, taste, and   authorship. His process often embraces imperfection, humor, and   spontaneity, creating works that appear casual or improvised but carry   deep social and cultural resonance. Costa's art merges the aesthetics of   resourcefulness and informality found in urban street life with a   conceptual critique of global consumer culture. 
Beauty and meaning can emerge from the overlooked or the broken: Costa's   installations and assemblages often evoke a sense of fragility and   transience, emphasizing the impermanent and the handmade. Through this,   Costa challenges the hierarchies of art production and the fetishization   of the "finished" artwork. His use of found materials also reflects   broader political and economic realities, particularly in Brazil, where   scarcity and creativity often coexist. Ultimately, Adriano Costa's work   is a meditation on transformation—of objects, meanings, and systems of   value—inviting viewers to reconsider what is discarded, both materially   and socially.