
For the Coca-Cola Project [Cildo] Meireles removed Coca-Cola bottles from
normal circulation and modified them by adding critical political
statements, or instructions for turning the bottle into a Molotov
cocktail, before returning them to the circuit of exchange. On the
bottles, such messages as ‘Yankees Go Home’ are followed by the work’s
title and the artist’s statement of purpose: ‘To register informations
and critical opinions on bottles and return them to circulation’. The
Coca-Cola bottle is an everyday object of mass circulation; in 1970 in
Brazil it was a symbol of US imperialism and it has become, globally, a
symbol of capitalist consumerism. As the bottle progressively empties of
dark brown liquid, the statement printed in white letters on a
transparent label adhering to its side becomes increasingly invisible,
only to reappear when the bottle is refilled for recirculation...
In 1970, when Meireles produced the Insertions into Ideological Circuits projects,
Brazil was undergoing the most oppressive period of its twenty-one year
government by military dictatorship. At the time, the Insertions constituted
a form of guerrilla tactics of political resistance in order to elude
the strict state censorship enforced by the regime.
From the collections of the
Tate Museum.
No comments:
Post a Comment