Gerald Fox
Cildo Meireles

Cildo Meireles with his sculpture Inmensa, Inhotim Centro de Arte Contemporânea, Brazil, 2008
Cildo Meireles with his sculpture Inmensa, Inhotim Centro de Arte Contemporânea, Brazil, 2008
© Cildo Meireles. Photo: Gerald Fox
Saturday 6 December 2008, 19.00
Sunday 7 December 2008, 15.00
Sunday 14 December 2008, 15.00

A pioneer of installation art in the 1960s, Brazilian Cildo Meireles (b.1948) has influenced generations of international artists, yet, surprisingly, his work is little known in Britain. His dramatic and politically charged environments have included maze-like structures built upon shards of broken glass that the visitor must walk across, and rooms filled with ashes and the smell of gas.

This documentary (Gerald Fox, UK 2008, 50 min) by award-winning director Gerald Fox, presents an intimate portrait of the artist’s life and work, a story largely told by the artist himself. It opens with a section in Rio, where we see Meireles at his studio, with his family, and visiting the factory where his works are fabricated, before following him to London as he prepares for his retrospective at Tate Modern.

The film will also be televised on The South Bank Show, ITV, Sunday 26 October 2008, 22.35.

A Tate Media production in association with Arts Council England

Tate Modern  Starr Auditorium
Free
Seated on a first-come, first-served basis

Access for wheelchairs and pushchairs  Hearing loop available  

This event is related to the Cildo Meireles exhibition