Galerie Barbara Thumm \ Fernanda Galvão

\Fernanda Galvãoserpent serpent Snake20.03. - 18.04.2026

Fernanda Galvão, *1994, São Paulo, Brazil
lives and works between São Paulo, Brazil and Paris, France

Press text (DE/ENG)

How do we represent nature? The question calls for a critical reassessment of the Western history of vision.

With the invention of perspective during the Renaissance, painting established a visual regime centered on the human subject: the world became organized around a stable viewpoint, structured by depth and ordered according to harmonious rules. Natural elements -trees, plants, rivers, mountains- were distributed within a rational and anthropocentric framework. As Anne Cauquelin(1) has shown, landscape does not coincide with nature itself; it is a cultural construction. The frame does not merely delimit an image, it produces a way of seeing and therefore a way of symbolically inhabiting space.

Fernanda Galvão’s painting works against this tradition. It offers neither a stabilized horizon nor a dominant point of view, neither contemplative distance nor consoling refuge. Forms overflow, contaminate one another, and proliferate, generating spaces without origin or end. What emerges is no longer a nature designed to be seen, but an autonomous milieu, indifferent to our presence.

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Works

Galerie Barbara Thumm \ Fernanda Galvão \ serpent serpent Snake (2026)

Fernanda Galvão

serpent serpent Snake (2026)
charcoal, dry pastel, oil bar, and oil on linen mounted on freestanding wooden panels
204 x 418 x 8 cm
Panel 1: 204 x 137 x 8 cm
Panel 2: 204 x 134 x 8 cm
Panel 3: 204 x 147 x 8 cm

Exhibition Views

Galerie Barbara Thumm \ Fernanda Galvão
Galerie Barbara Thumm \ Fernanda Galvão
Galerie Barbara Thumm \ Fernanda Galvão
Galerie Barbara Thumm \ Fernanda Galvão