An exploration into the wild and wonderful world of Luísa Correia Pereira (1945–2009), an obscure jewel of late modernism and "enfant terrible" of the Portuguese art scene.
"Portugal is not a place for women." These words propelled the artist Paula Rego to pursue an English education, which informed her future career and subsequent legacy. How would life have looked for Luísa Correia Pereira had someone told her something similar in view of being a queer woman in the 1970s and '80s? Born into one of Portugal's aristocratic dynasties, Pereira shunned her family, propelled instead by a singular pursuit of her art. At seventeen, in 1962, she volunteered to work on the World Expo in Brazil where she became aware of poetry, cosmology, and biodiversity—all major influences on her work.
Pereira then spent some time in Paris during the peak of the second-wave feminist movement, and studied library science, a field common to several women artists of the time. While working at the Foundation Nationale des Sciences Politiques in Paris she developed her painting practice after receiving a grant from the Gulbenkian Foundation. Here she was aided by the tutelage of the famed Portuguese artist Julio Pomar.
Following the Carnation Revolution in 1974, Pereira returned to Portugal, where she experienced spells of recognition before falling into obscurity, partly due to episodes of manic depression. The press dubbed her an enfant terrible. She was renowned for being able to draw people into her orbit, then alienate them just as quicky—a habit that few realized was a consequence of her complex post-traumatic stress. The emotional topography of her life transpires in her early works on paper including watercolors, frottage, and collage, often depicting surrealist landscapes with distended bodies blanketed under thick washes of color. Her later canvases portrayed amorphous limbs strung together by ladders that would become a recurring motif for the rest of her working life.
In this volume, author and cultural historian Omar Kholeif narrates a five-year journey through a collection of Correia Pereira's works that variously speak, sing, and cry, returning us to a child of nature. Compiled from hundreds of hours of interviews during time spent in Portugal, France, and Brazil, this first monograph in English on the artist's work and life is at once searing and heartwarming.
Imagine/otherwise presents critical biographies of underrepresented
queer, non-binary, or
female-identifying artists. Edited by
Omar Kholeif, the series emphasizes the concept of "female worlding" with books that serve as field guides into previously unexplored, overlooked, or inaccessible artistic lives. The overall proposition of the series (to "imagine" a world "otherwise") stems from the desire to find a different way of writing and reading about art. Can art be examined unreservedly, unburdened of the limits imposed by the dominant hand of hegemony?
Current editorial advisors for the series include
Skye Arundhati Thomas, Zoe Butt, Carla Chammas, Alison Hearst, and Sarah Perks.
Omar Kholeif (born in Cairo, lives and works in Chicago and London) is a writer, curator, editor, and broadcaster. He has written extensively on art in a global context, focusing on art that intersects with the Internet, as well as works of art from emerging geographic territories that have yet to be seen in the mainstream. He is the author and or editor of over two-dozen books and his writing has appeared in
The Guardian,
Wired,
frieze, and
Artforum,
Mousse, among numerous publications. Media organs such as,
The New York Times, BBC,
Financial Times,
The Wall Street Journal,
GQ,
The Economist,
The Art Newspaper,
Vice,
The New Scientist, and others, have profiled his work.