VHILS
work
Lisbon, Portugal
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attributes
- Graffiti, Sculptural, Urban
practices
- Muralist, Socially Engaged Art
Portuguese artist Alexandre Farto (b. Lisbon, 1987) began interacting visually with the urban environment under the name of Vhils as graffiti writer in the early 2000s. Peeling back the layers of our material culture like a contemporary urban archaeologist, Vhils reflects on the impact of urbanity, development, and increased uniformity on landscapes and people’s identities around the globe.
Exploring the concept of creative destruction, Vhils seeks to make visible the invisible that lies beneath the surface of things, creating powerful and poetic visual statements from materials the city rejects. He carves, cuts, drills, etches and blasts his way through the layers of materials. Yet, like an archaeologist, he removes in order to expose, bringing to light the beauty that lies trapped beneath.
His groundbreaking carving technique – which forms the basis of the Scratching the Surface Project and was first presented to the public at the VSP group exhibition in Lisbon in 2007 and at the Cans Festival in London the following year –, has been hailed as one of the most compelling approaches to art created in the public space in the last decades.
Vhils’ practice has been the subject of numerous solo and group exhibitions, including at well-reputed art institutions such as MAAT – Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (Lisbon), Contemporary Arts Center (Cincinnati), Le Centquatre-Paris (Paris), CAFA Art Museum (Beijing), Hong Kong Contemporary Art Foundation (Hong Kong), Palais de Tokyo (Paris), Barbican Centre (London), and the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (San Diego), among others.