Paula do Prado
Sacred/Sagrada, 2017
Fabric collage and beading
68 x 70 cm
26 3/4 x 27 1/2 in
26 3/4 x 27 1/2 in
PDP 004
A reference to La Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona and the intermixing of African and Catholic religious beliefs. Do Prado centres the intersections of her Bantu- Kongo, Iberian and indigenous...
A reference to La Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona and the intermixing of African and Catholic religious beliefs.
Do Prado centres the intersections of her Bantu- Kongo, Iberian and indigenous Charrúan Uruguayan ancestry, in her mixed media fibre weavings, fabric sculptures and hangings. Her work references her experiences of diaspora as a migrant living on the unceded lands of Gadigal People of the Sydney Basin. Do Prado's works reference matrilineality and embody the spiritual and philosophical cosmologies of her aforementioned heritages to inform decolonial practice. Her woven forms and soft sculptures invite contemplation of the connections between nature, history, duration and space through the intricacies of knots, fissures, crochet loops, coils and beadwork. The exhibition will feature the works: Lenge (2023) Sorrow (2023), Abya Yala (2022), Habla con la Luna (2021) and Resonance (2018).
Do Prado centres the intersections of her Bantu- Kongo, Iberian and indigenous Charrúan Uruguayan ancestry, in her mixed media fibre weavings, fabric sculptures and hangings. Her work references her experiences of diaspora as a migrant living on the unceded lands of Gadigal People of the Sydney Basin. Do Prado's works reference matrilineality and embody the spiritual and philosophical cosmologies of her aforementioned heritages to inform decolonial practice. Her woven forms and soft sculptures invite contemplation of the connections between nature, history, duration and space through the intricacies of knots, fissures, crochet loops, coils and beadwork. The exhibition will feature the works: Lenge (2023) Sorrow (2023), Abya Yala (2022), Habla con la Luna (2021) and Resonance (2018).