Rio de Janeiro's favelas reflected through art

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Rio de Janeiro's favelas reflected through art

High above Rio de Janeiro's beachside neighbourhoods is Cantagalo, one of the many favelas clinging to the city's hillsides.
A mural in Rio de Janeiro
Cantagalo's murals often reflect everday challenges
Cantagalo, along with the communities of Pavao and Pavaozinho, is a winding mass of concrete alleyways and stairwells that snake up the hill overlooking the famous Ipanema and Copacabana beaches.
Every day thousands of the favela's residents travel down the hill to work in the homes, shops, hotels and bars of their richer neighbours but the daily migration is one-sided.
Many wealthier Rio residents have never set foot in Cantagalo but an ambitious new project in the hillside community is working to change that.
"They thought I was from the government and wanted to take their homes off them” - Carlos Ezquival (Acme) Street Artist
Museu de Favela is trying to turn the shantytown, which is home to more than 20,000 people, into a popular destination.
Like an art gallery that has exploded on to the streets, the Museu is made up of a series of huge murals covering 20 buildings, all commissioned by local artists.
"Samba, capoiera, funk, everything that the elite of Rio de Janeiro enjoy comes from the favela," says Sidney "Tartaruga" Silva, vice-president of the Museu, as he guides visitors up the hill.
The project's aim is to reflect the history of this urban community and give a voice to the people who live there.
"At the same time as the residents go down the hill to work," says Mr Silva, "these districts should start to get to know this community and stop this segregation."

Hotbed of crime

It is estimated that some 20% of Rio de Janeiro's eight million-strong population live in favelas.
A mural and a view of the favela Many of Rio's favelas are perched on the hilltops surrounding the city
Like many urban slums, it has been a hotbed of poverty and crime; run by druglords it was a place where only the poorest lived.
Recently things have changed. In 2009, the Brazilian government set about transforming the favelas and sent Police Pacification Units, known as UPPs, into some of the slums.
And, because many of the favelas in Rio are built on a hill, with staggering views across the city, local authorities have been on a drive to make them a popular destination for tourists.
But Sidney Silva's project is one step ahead of them.
Run by the local community itself, Museu de Favela is a project that draws on the deep cultural traditions of the shantytown to tell its story, not just to tourists but to Brazilians too.
It recognises favela culture as something residents can be proud of, a story they can tell to those who would never set foot here before.
A mural of a woman carrying water on her head Some murals tell the complex history of migration in the favela while some tell stories of simpler struggles
Max Andrade is a doctor from Rio de Janeiro, but admits that he has avoided the area until now.
"Normally we don't go into the favela," he says. "Until the police were posted here there was a lot of crime, it was very dangerous."
Today he wanders around the neighbourhood with Carlos Ezquival, president of the museum. A street artist himself, he goes by the name of Acme.
Mr Esquival proudly explains the simple stories of everyday life behind each mural they pass.
"This painting on the side of this house is portraying difficulties in the community," he says, "like the difficulty of walking up the hill with a huge can of water on your head."
The theme of each one is suggested by a local resident and this one resonates with 46-year-old Diva.
She has lived in Cantagalo all her life and remembers the battles that used to rage over access to water.
"It was always a huge fight because you would queue with a little tin and someone would come along with 50 tins and then there was a fight.
Max Andrade Max Andrade would like to revisit and learn more about the favela
"There were women pulling each other's hair, even the police had to come up sometimes," she remembers.
"Today I see a different community."
Most of the houses in the favela now have access to water and electricity and Diva is happy to have these memories consigned to history, though not forgotten.
Despite these improvements, life in the favela is still fraught with insecurity.
Carlos Esquival saw this when he approached residents asking to use their homes as canvasses.
"When I arrived with something to sign they were very suspicious," he explains.

The Strand

  • Helen Clegg visited Museu de Favela for BBC World Service's The Strand programme
  • The Strand is the regular global arts programme broadcast by the BBC World Service
"They thought I was from the government and wanted to take their homes off them because at the moment there are a lot of works going on. Houses are being demolished to create new roads."
The difference between the favelas and the rest of Rio is still stark.
Dr Andrade acknowledges this. "This is a different world, a world where relationships are different, a world I don't know," he says.
"I want to bring my daughters and my friends because no one that I know has come here. I think people can't imagine what it is like."

By BBC

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