2002 - 2024, Copyright ©



Perceptible 13

Metal, fabric, light bulbs and movement sensors
610 x 244 x 244 cm (approx.)
20 x 8 x 8 ft (approx.)

Rio de Janeiro, 2007


The installation was shown in the exhibition “Novas Aquisições” at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio, in 2007, and marked Gustavo Prado’s work entrance to Brazil’s most important art collection by the age of 26.

Perceptible 13 used the same structure as Perceptible 7 by this time applied to a space that had a much larger scale, the monumental room at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio; right after the work was acquired by Brazil’s most important art collector – Gilberto Chateaubriand. This time the corridor was connected to a corner of the modernist building, done by Afonso Reidy, right next to the glass façade, which, thanks to a mirroring effect, duplicated the view of the lights in the installation, and created a even more complex spatial sensation.

Once again the sensor was turned into the inside space of the corridor and its surroundings as well, and captured the spectator’s transit in the room to produce a variety of color combinations, this time between red and blue.
Created over the course of 10 years (between 2002 and 2011), the Perceptible series followed and reflected significant changes in Gustavo Prado’s work, particularly regarding the viewer’s perception and the relationship between the artwork and space. Perceptible Sundial (2002) is the first work in the series and is presented as a cube (considered one of the simplest forms for human recognition), made with a wooden structure and covered with fabric and paper. Its relatively simple form becomes complex in its interaction with space (and time). Aspects such as the place where it is positioned, and the natural light that shines upon it (which changes throughout the day and from one day to the next), influence characteristics such as viewing angles, transparency, opacity, and shadows, making the perception of this work broad, varied, and almost unpredictable. It functions as a constant exercise in the viewer’s perception and the possibility of presence within space.

The following works in the series increasingly emphasize the installation dimension, expanding their scale in built environments with colored fluorescent lamps, fabrics, metal structures, presence sensors, and monitors. These are environments in which viewers are invited to be present, where external interferences are suspended, giving way to conditions of experimentation created and controlled by the artist, such as the use of color and the intensity of lighting, which directly affect the perception of space. Perceptible 8 (2005), for example, reproduces the form of Perceptible Sundial on an enlarged scale and, instead of relying on the sun, uses a set of lamps connected to the structure of the environment and presence sensors to shape the lighting of the space.

In the final works of the Perceptible series, the artist and the viewer engage with everyday space, outside the control and predictability of institutional spaces. This is the case with works like Perceptible Heraclitus River (2006). In this piece, a geometric structure was installed in different locations along a river in the city of Itaipava (a mountainous region of Rio de Janeiro). Over the course of 30 days, these situations were documented in photographs and videos, later edited into images that construct different perceptions from the presence of this object in a natural setting.

As a whole, the works in the Perceptible series draw attention to reality understood as a construction, always in progress—open, in process, and shaped by individual, political, social, and economic variables.