Poscatidevenum, by Eder Santos | 10th Festival

Video, music and performance come together in a large multimedia installation designed by Eder Santos, Paulo Santos and the group Uakti, presented in 1992

performances

No Sleep and a dead Bird, by Stephen Vitiello | 10th Festival

In Stephen Vitiello’s 1994 performance, live footage is combined with spoken texts and a soundtrack based on guitar loops and bird calls

performances

Marcelo Tas | 9th Festival

“Reality does not exist,” in the words of Marcelo Tas. According to the artist, reality is always manipulated whenever one is working with television

testimonies

Timothy Binkley | 9th Festival

A guest to the 9th edition, in 1992, Timothy Blinkley expounds his views on virtual reality. Built using computers, virtual reality is defined by abstraction in opposition to the concrete nature of objects

testimonies

Wesley Duke Lee | 9th Festival

To Wesley Duke Lee, the artist must intervene if video is to become something more than just "a bunch of hardware that is good for nothing..."

testimonies

Gianni Toti | 9th Festival

One of the people honored at the 1992 edition, Gianni Totti discusses the roles of artist and of art. To him, art is the chaotic beginning at which order and power are made to contradict each other

testimonies

Eduardo Coutinho | 9th Festival

The filmmaker presents his perspectives on video and documentary in Brazil, discusses the notion of authorship, and television productions

testimonies

Bill Viola | 9th Festival

“All technological breakthroughs affect my work,” explains Bill Viola. The notion of perception is central to the artist’s work, and the body is the key with which one connects with the world

testimonies

Amaral Netto | 9th Festival

Amaral Netto discusses the independent news report produced for TV, and the notion of truth in the reporter’s work

testimonies

Event’s coverage on TV Cultura | 09th Festival

The coverage featured the highlights of the 1992 Festival’s closing day, including the debate “10 questions for 100 Brazilians,” focusing on Brazilian TV; Roberto Muylaert was one of the participants

in review