Tales Frey

What Can a Body Do? (2021)

 

Tales Frey, Single Costume. Performance activated in Porto, Portugal. October 2019. Photo by Hilda de Paulo

 

A body isn’t just made of flesh and bone. Nor just matter. A mix of machine and instrument, prosthesis and experimentation laboratory, it is, above all, a set of codes, signs, images, technologies, protocols and characteristics. It is a party and a battlefield at the same time. As Paul Preciado teaches us, our body is a socially-constructed text: it is through this always-in-dispute element that political power imposes itself.

It is in this direction that Tales Frey’s work is sewed. We are faced with a research interested in challenging the conventions of the hetero-patriarchal biomorphological body in search for a more hybrid organism of elastic matter and multiple and transient forms. It is not uncommon to identify in his works some procedures that desecrate the body through mirrors, duplications and multiplications, temporarily transforming it into a strange and less recognizable device – less guided by stigmas, social standards and pre-established expectations. Tales also plays by confusing the feminine and masculine stamps, suspending a supposed naturalness of the sex/gender contract by proposing experiments that shake conventional signs such as the wedding dress, high heels, tutus and other garments considered “made for women”, or suits and leather shoes, considered a “man thing”. His actions are questioning binarism used as key to read the social body.

A radicalization of this gesture leads us to more interactive works, inviting the public to experience situations that demand a true negotiation of differences, placing the work as the democratic ground par excellence. The artist has explored the concept of indument, by setting up devices that work like skin connecting one body to the other. Pieces such as the boxing gloves, clothes, elastic fabrics and pairs of shoes demand that participants establish different agreements between desire and movement, reminding us of a certain relational tradition in Brazilian art, interested in the binomial art/life. I am interested in naming these works as social sculptures, since they tension the individual and the collective; the personal and the political. In these operations, the self-other relationship is not stable, but interchangeable. If there is no possible consensus, the work can be the place of dissent coexistence. In fact, this is perhaps the most latent challenge for all of us in Brazil in 2021.

But there is something else. Looking at these works, one may also find that every identity is built by contrast to an otherness, another one from whom we are differentiated. We are only something in relation to a referent, which means that we can be many as our contexts change. The body structure is the composition of its relationship; and the possibility of recognizing identity as a musical chairs game enables us to pursue a subjectivity less subordinated to social constraints. I believe this is where lies the power of Tales Frey’s work: to claim the subject as a fictional construction in order to understand it (and necessarily) as an object as well. It is in this double condition that we’ll be able to exercise ourselves as singular, migrant and transitory platforms – open forms, like the very matter of life.

 

Pollyana Quintella

 

ARTWORKS

1) Tales Frey, Il Faut Souffrir pour Être Belle, 2018. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 50 x 70 cm;

2) Tales Frey, To Be Privy, 2017. Object, 2017, 24 x 63 cm;

3) Tales Frey, Triumph, 2019. Object, 20 x 60 x 20 cm;

4) Tales Frey, Dress, 2014-15. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 120 x 56 cm;

5) Tales Frey, Sissyparity, 2020. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 40 x 100 cm;

6) Tales Frey, Red Carpet #1, #2 and #3, 2019. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 46 x 70 cm;

7) Tales Frey, Gatecrashers, 2019. Object, 140 x 70 cm;

8) Tales Frey, Be (On) You, 2016. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 37 x 25 cm;

9) Tales Frey, Ilha #1, 2016. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 100 x 70 cm;

10) Tales Frey, Reverso, 2015. Inkjet printing on cotton paper, 35 x 23 cm.

 

Tales Frey, Triumph. Action performed in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. June 2019. Photo by Hilda de Paulo

 

Tales Frey, Triunph, 2019. Performative object, 80 x 25 x 30 cm. Edition: 3 + 2 P.A.

 

CREDITS

Tales Frey: What Can a Body Do? | SP-Arte 365 and Verve Gallery, São Paulo-SP, Brazil | Critical text: Pollyana Quintella | Coordination: Allann Seabra and Ian Duarte Lucas | 16 March to 01 May 2021