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Sofia Alazraki

Morning rituals and dissociation tools

26 Sept 19:00

Baselitz’s impact on modern art extends far beyond his signature upside-down compositions. His work boldly confronts the legacies of German history and post-war identity, often embracing rawness, contradiction, and discomfort. By reversing the figure and deconstructing form, he challenges the viewer’s expectations and confronts traditional notions of beauty and representation. His rebellious approach, rooted in expressionism and infused with political undertones, continues to inspire contemporary artists who seek to push the boundaries of visual language.

MORNING RITUALS & DISSOCIATION TOOLS Sofia Alazraki, Buenos Aires 1991.

Sofia Alazraki’s work emerges from careful observation and collection of objects around her—things not everyone notices, things that have already been used, lost, dead, broken, or empty. In this series of still lifes, she explores the complex relationship we have with ourselves, with our self-image, and with our bonds.

Sofia creates scenes full of symbolism, where each object seems to transform into a tool that generates introspection, as if by observing them, we are looking into a mirror. In these visual landscapes, the broken and the beautiful coexist, while the harsh and the tender intertwine, opening a space to explore the relationship between desire, disillusionment and laughter.

The objects Sofia selects come to life, gaining temporality and action, like characters embodying the destruction and reconstruction of an idea—something that can no longer be the same as before, but still tries.…

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