The Brazilian artist Julio Villani mounted a protest against the right-wing Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro in Paris yesterday. Villani hung six black cloths on the façade of the Brazilian Embassy emblazoned with statements such as “impeach Bolsonaro” while a smaller white banner declared that “another Brazil is possible”.
The pieces symbolise the “ongoing determination, revolt and despair” the artist feels in the wake of Bolsonaro’s handling of the Covid-19 crisis, along with the president’s “systemic attacks on cultural institutions, Indian and minority rights, and forest preservation”. In early March, Bolsonaro claimed that the virus is a “small cold” that only afflicts the elderly population. Brazil has now recorded more than 310,000 coronavirus cases, placing it behind the US and Russia, which have the highest.
“The banners are a reference to the black cloths people are tying up at their windows and balconies in Brazil. The cloths are a sign of grief [over] Covid-19 and a [message of] support for medical teams but also a cry of revolt against Bolsonaro and his government, so I put black cloths at the windows of the Brazilian embassy,” Villani tells The Art Newspaper.