Eduardo Rezende, born in Rio de Janeiro in 1977, was introduced to the art world at an early age, influenced by his mother, an art dealer.
He began his professional career in photography in 2001 and, since then, he has developed a distinct visual language, marked by graphic rigor, the expressive use of color and an almost sculptural attention to the textures and
forms of the urban environment.
His work is centered on the observation of spaces in transformation. Elements that would normally go unnoticed become silent protagonists. Even in the absence of human figures, his images bear the marks of time, work, and matter
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Through his lens, Eduardo elevates the ordinary in visual constructions with a strong graphic and chromatic impact. His photographs challenge perception: at certain times, it’s hard to tell if what we see is flat or three-dimensional, a photograph, or something beyond. They offer a new perspective on the world, inviting the viewer to find beauty and meaning beyond the obvious
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Living between different cultures and geographies, Eduardo brings to his work a nomadic and contemporary perspective, a view that sees the world through what is in flux, in ruins or in the process of reconstruction. His photography is always in search of what exists in between: between the visible and the veiled, between the surface and the substance, between what was and what is yet to come
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