Your name
Masina Pinheiro & Gal Cipreste
Place of birth
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Place where you live now
Rio de Janeiro (together)
3 words to describe you
Retaliation, perversion and subtlety.
Why do you take pictures?
To create images that replace memories imposed on our community. Especially about gender, childhood, sex and family.
Where do you get your inspiration?
From difficult-to-define facts that happened to us and made us equally difficult to define; everything that makes the idea of gender confusing; real stories considered inconceivable from a normative point of view; and perhaps from the pleasure of telling them with unexpected forms. Also, movies and literature.
Who are your influences?
Claude Cahun & Marcel Moore, Anohni, Greer Lankton, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Silvino Mendonça
What determines the subject matter you choose?
Our subject is us and the people we love and who have experienced something similar to us. Or something that happens because we are all this disobedience, perversion and restlessness. We use archive material and invented sculptures.
What impact would you like your art to have?
A wild answer and the ultimate goal: that people should be able to imagine free childhoods, especially gender-disobedient childhoods.
What artwork do you never get bored with?
Muholi's Somnyama Ngonyama, Hail the Dark Lioness, Momo Okabe's Ilmatar, Rodrigo Braga's oeuvre, Hoda Afshar's oeuvre, Ocean Vuong's novels.
Is there anything you want to add?
We do extensive collaborative work. We believe that dissenters, in general, understand collaboration as something vital. Historically thrown to the margins, where we mix, in ghettos, bathrooms, retreats, silences, we feel a deep tiredness and indifference to the traditions of the artistic world. The idea of being an isolated genius, of being born knowing everything, of having a unique gift, of a glorified name, is ridiculous. Our research is also about the intertwining of dissident autobiographies.