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11th Bienal Poster
The reference to the Mona Lisa, as the greatest icon in art history, involves bringing out its most significant detail - the smile. Just as the poster for the previous Bienal dialogs with Op Art, this one does so with Pop Art, as the movement that had been the great star of the 9th Bienal. This dialog is seen in the fact of the detail being enlarged to make reticules visible, a typical Roy Uchtenstein ploy, and in its use of images from the mass media, which was a recurring feature of Andy Warhols work.. Bienal 50 Anos, 1951-2001, 2001, p.297

Authorship: Godubin Belmonte and Moacyr Rocha

"The reference to the Mona Lisa, as the greatest icon in art history, involves bringing out its most significant detail - the smile. Just as the poster for the previous Bienal dialogs with Op Art, this one does so with Pop Art, as the movement that had been the great star of the 9th Bienal. This dialog is seen in the fact of the detail being enlarged to make reticules visible, a typical Roy Uchtenstein ploy, and in its use of images from the mass media, which was a recurring feature of Andy Warhol's work.". Bienal 50 Anos, 1951-2001, 2001, p.297

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26 bienal sp
Tarefa a cargo do cartunista Ziraldo e homenagem da Bienal ao mesmo, que, por sua vez, não cobrou pela obra, o cartaz da mostra Terra de Ninguém fez alusão aos mapeamentos geográficos propostos pela curadoria de Alfons Hug. Tendo em conta a diversidade e miscigenação brasileiras, a peça apresenta uma variedade dos 143 tons diferentes de pele existentes no país.

Autoria: Ziraldo