Epithelium, by Peter de Brito

Pórtico Gallery

Apr. 11, 2026, 12:00 am

Travessa Dona Paula, 116 – Higienópolis, São Paulo, Brazil

Pórtico presents, on February 28, 2026, Peter de Brito’s first solo exhibition at the gallery, curated by Claudinei Roberto da Silva. Titled Epitélio [Epithelium], the show opens the gallery’s annual program and continues the artist’s investigation into racist mechanisms operating in multiple ways within society, as well as the memories of the scars that compose this social body.

Trained in biology, physical education, and fine arts, Peter de Brito has developed a practice grounded in technical experimentation and critical reflection on the body, often infused with irony, resulting in works of both poetic and political intensity. “My engagement with sociopolitical causes began to appear naturally in my artistic practice, as a result of a process of immersion in the theme of the body,” the artist states.

Peter conceived the performance A presença negra [The Black Presence] in 2014 in partnership with Moisés Patrício. The action promoted the occupation of galleries and cultural institutions by Afro-Brazilian individuals during exhibition openings. The artist’s own trajectory reflects this context: although he began his artistic career more than 20 years ago, he was only represented by a gallery last year, upon joining Pórtico.

Such concerns emerge in the series Eugenia, in which the artist employs discoloration as a formal procedure. Peter applies bleach to black cotton fabric to reveal images, in a process he defines as “constructive unpainting.” By carefully controlling different concentrations of bleach—using brushes or pouring the liquid directly onto the fabric—he rigorously manages the material’s action time. Forms appear in varying tones of ochre and sepia to compose the skin tones of the depicted figures, depending on whether he sustains or interrupts the chlorine’s action through water baths.

Through self-portraits and family photos, Peter addresses eugenic ideology and its contemporary legacy, manifested in police violence and underrepresentation in leadership positions. In Brazil, Black people accounted for 86% of those killed by police intervention in nine states in 2024, according to the report Pele Alvo: crônicas de dor e luta (“Targeted Skin: Chronicles of Pain and Struggle”) by Observatórios da Segurança.

The artist also references the painting A Redenção de Cam (1895) by Spanish artist Modesto Brocos (1852–1936), frequently cited as a visual translation of Brazil’s whitening thesis. Years after the abolition of slavery, the work aligned with late 19th- and early 20th-century eugenic discourse, proposing the control of miscegenation and the progressive whitening of the Black population.

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