Ilka Lemos

Series - BECAUSE TODAY IS SATURDAY

Paintings
Agora

Acrylic paint on canvas

157 x 140 cm

1997

Red elephant going to the street corner

Acrylic paint on canvas

135 x 120 cm

1998

Crosses

Acrylic paint on canvas

128 x 137 cm

1998

Red

Acrylic paint on canvas

138 x 130 cm

1998

Calvary

Acrylic paint on canvas

158 x 120 cm

1999

Yellow Square (Woman)

Acrylic paint, tulle fabric and collage on canvas

140 x 125 cm

2001

Golden man

Acrylic paint, tulle fabric and collage on canvas

130 x 115 cm

2001

Ernesto

Acrylic paint, tulle fabric and collage on canvas

106 x 130 cm

2002

Untitled

Acrylic paint, tulle fabric and collage on canvas

175 x 130 cm

2002

Me

Acrylic paint on canvas

120 x 140 cm

2002

Silvia

Acrylic paint on canvas

120 x 136 cm

2002

The man of the two moons

Acrylic paint on canvas

63 x 94 cm

2002

Woman in the studio

Acrylic paint on canvas

108 x 170cm

2002

The Kiss

Acrylic paint on canvas

170 x 139 cm

2002

There's a crazy jealous fiancé

Acrylic paint on canvas

125 x 138 cm

1998 - 2003

There's a woman who turns into a man

Acrylic paint on canvas

125 x 150 cm

2003

White Horse

Acrylic paint on canvas

125 x 138 cm

2003

Play again

Acrylic paint on canvas

111 x 135 cm

2003

The hug

Acrylic paint on canvas

120 x 100 cm

2004

Larissa (The Woman in Red)

Acrylic paint on canvas

115 x 135 cm

2006

Androgynous

Acrylic paint on canvas

180 x 200 cm

2006

Man

Acrylic paint on canvas

97 x 148 cm

2009

phs0024

Acrylic paint on canvas

145 x 95 cm

2009

BECAUSE TODAY IS SATURDAY

The buzzing nightlife and highly frequented bars in Vila Buarque’s neighbourhood in São Paulo were always catching Ilka Lemos’ attention. When her studio moved to Canuto do Val street in the late 1990’s, she used to lean out the window and fantasize about the lives that intertwined and existed there. The excessiveness of colours, sexuality at the height of its intensity, the nightly euphoria and the people who “lived in poetry” nurtured Ilka’s imagination and production.

 

Surrounded by the words of Ariano Suassuna, Machado de Assis, Manoel de Barros, Carlos Drummond de Andrade, Cora Coralina, João Cabral de Melo Neto and Vinicius de Moraes, the series “Because Today is Saturday” exalts the autonomy of the sixth day of the week, as the epitome of freedom of existence.

1997 - 2009