The 1998 Bienal de São Paulo remade art history from a Brazilian
perspective, and presented a new model for exhibition-making in the era
of postcolonial globalization. The show employed the Brazilian notion of
anthropophagy as both concept and method, encouraging "contamination"
and "cannibalization" of the canon. By doing so it proposed a new model
for large-scale curatorial projects that could effectively address
nonspecialist audiences. Photographs and gallery plans reconstruct this
important project, and an essay by Lisette Lagnado provides critical
analysis and historical context. Additional texts by Renato Sztutman,
Mirtes Marins de Oliveira and Carmen Mörsch and Catrin Seefranz are
complemented by recent interviews with curator Paulo Herkenhoff and
participating artists.