Projection – Olu Oguibe – Must you take everything that belongs to Indigenous people?
From December 4 to 7, the projection of the work Must you take everything that belongs to Indigenous people?, by Olu Oguibe, will take place on the side wall of MAC-USP. The projection will run from Thursday to Sunday, from 6:30 pm to 10 pm.
The installation is already present in other locations around the country: in downtown São Paulo, visible from the Minhocão; on the façade of the Museu de Arte do Rio, in Rio de Janeiro; and on João Paulo II Avenue in Belém, during COP30. It now enters into direct dialogue with the Bienal Pavilion and with Theresah Ankomah’s work that covers its façade.
Olu Oguibe is a multimedia artist, author, and theorist whose work ranges from minimalist formalism to social engagement. His production has been exhibited in museums and galleries including the Whitney Museum (New York), Whitechapel Gallery (London), and Migros Museum (Zurich), as well as in biennials such as Venice, Havana, and Busan. He is the author of public artworks and monuments, among them Monument for Strangers and Refugees in Kassel, which earned him the Arnold Bode Prize at documenta 14. He has received fellowships from the Open Society Foundations, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Rockefeller Foundation.
Service
Projection – Olu Oguibe – Must you take everything that belongs to Indigenous people?
36th Bienal de São Paulo – Not All Travellers Walk Roads – Of Humanity as Practice
December 4–7, 2025
Thurs–Sun, 6:30 pm
MAC-USP
Av. Pedro Álvares Cabral, 1301
São Paulo, Brazil
free admission