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In Conversation: Naine Terena

Brazil Footprint 0.0

15 Jul 2021
33 min watch

Watch a conversation between indigenous curator and scholar Naine Terena and Francesca Laura Cavallo from the Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies at the University of Kent.

The pair will discuss the importance of actively preserving Brazil's indigenous knowledge to think and respond to environmental and personal disasters.

Brazil Footprint 0.0 is a week-long online festival exploring Brazil's specific perspective on the global mobilisation against climate inequalities, in the context of the UN’s upcoming COP26 conference. Curated by Francesca Laura Cavallo for the Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies at the University of Kent in partnership with the Barbican Centre.

Claudia Andujar: The Yanomami Struggle is exhibited in The Curve until Sunday 29 August.

Speakers

Naine Terena (Cuiabá–MT, 1980) belongs to the Terena indigenous people of the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, and is a professor at the Faculdade Católica de Mato Grosso. As a curator, activist and researcher, she focuses primarily on the social aspects of art, investigating how historical narratives are constructed, and exploring the biased mechanism of power distribution. She has curated, among other works, the exhibition Véxoa: Nós sabemos (Véxoa: We Know, October 2020/April 2021), at Pinacoteca of São Paulo, with works by 23 indigenous artists and collectives. She has a Master's in art from the University of Brasília, a Doctorate in Education from PUC-São Paulo and a postdoc at the Federal University of Mato Grosso (UFMT). She edited the book Povos indígenas no Brasil ( Brazil Publishing, 2018) and was a finalist of the Jane Lombard Prize for Art and Social Justice, awarded by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics in New York. As the head of the organisation Oráculo, established in 2012, Terena is also a communication advisor and programmer of socio-cultural-educational projects spanning from workshops on the Theatre of the Oppressed to talks on technology, Indigenous communities' land struggles and oppression of the LGBTQ community in Brazil. In recent years she has devoted herself to recording and learning several Terena chants. 

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