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PIVÔ BOULEVARD CELEBRATES TWO YEARS
07/09/2025
Free admission

Two years ago, Pivô arrived in Salvador, occupying a house that, in the 1960s, brought together artists and intellectuals who gave rise to movements such as Tropicália and Cinema Novo. To celebrate key milestones so far—and what is still to come—Pivô Boulevard opens its doors with a free public program. A series of events will take place over the weekend of September 6 and 7 and on Wednesday, September 10, including artistic activations, the opening of the exhibition Transmigração, and a Public Program. See details below.

On Sunday, September 7, Pivô Boulevard hosts its third annual Caruru, starting at 12pm. In Bahia, September is the month dedicated to Saints Cosmas and Damian and the Ibejis. By offering the traditional Afro-Brazilian dish caruru, the event celebrates gathering, sharing, protection, and the strengthening of community spirit. Marking Pivô’s two-year presence in Salvador and opening the exhibition Transmigração, the Caruru will be prepared by Cida de Nanã, Iyá Egbé of the Ilê Asipá terreiro, with the collective okra-cutting held the previous day (Saturday, 09/06).

Opening at 2pm, Transmigração presents a curatorial approach by the collective Beta-Local that transforms the traditional exhibition format into what the group calls “a practice of displacement, incorporation, and reactivation of territorialized memories.” The project — organized in partnership with OtherNetwork and ifa – Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen. connects artists, territories, and creative gestures between Salvador and Puerto Rico through actions, installations, and activated objects, featuring works by Jochi Melero (the “Soup Wizard”), MIMA, William Murphy, Michael Linares, Fabián Vélez, and Pablo Guardiola. The exhibition will be on view until October 4, Monday to Saturday, with no appointment required.

Sunday, 07/09


| Two-year Caruru at Pivô Boulevard (with Cida de Nanã) – 12pm to 2pm
| Opening of the exhibition Transmigração (curated by Beta-Local) – 6pm
On view until 10/04, Monday to Saturday, from 2pm to 7pm

Artists
Jochi Melero

Jochi Melero, photographer and cook, is recognized for a body of work that began in the 1970s, marked by iconic portraits of figures such as Benicio Del Toro and Silvio Rodríguez, and a singular sensitivity for capturing the world around him. Also known as the soup magician, he brings to Transmigração a speculative culinary practice rooted in Afro-Caribbean traditions, botany, and domestic alchemy. In this project, one of his cauldrons has been transformed into a pinhole camera with which he has captured images that oscillate between the ritual and the sensorial; another cauldron will be activated through the preparation of Sopa de rumores, a culinary spell that will enchant the object and turn it into a new piece. In this way, image, nourishment, and object become entangled in an affective archaeology where the material, the spiritual, and the symbolic coexist in a single gesture.

Fabián Vélez

Fabián Vélez  is a sound artist, composer, and multi-instrumentalist who has been active since the 1990s in Puerto Rico’s experimental and independent music scene. His practice spans modular synthesis, analog tape, and musique concrète, explored through both sonic and sculptural formats. In Transmigração, he collaborates in the live performance of La Caída del Alfiler (2025), a work by Michael Linares created using electrodes connected to living plants. His participation activates a sensitive ecology between the biological, the electronic, and the spiritual.

 

Michael D. Linares Vázquez

Michael D. Linares Vázquez is a visual artist, curator, and co-director of Beta-Local, whose work explores the symbolic power of objects and their potential to activate new forms of perception. His practice has been presented at venues such as LACMA, the São Paulo Biennial, the Museo de Arte Moderno de Medellín, and Art in General. In Transmigração, his contribution unfolds through site-sensitive interventions that combine performance, drawing, and assemblage, functioning as a connective infrastructure within the exhibition. His piece La caída del alfiler proposes a sensory and affective form of communication between humans and plants.

 

Pablo Guardiola

 

Pablo Guardiola is an artist, curator, and co-director of Beta-Local whose practice spans sculpture, photography, and writing. His work examines how narratives are constructed and perceived, and has been exhibited in spaces such as Romer Young Gallery, El Lobi, Km 0.2, and the San Francisco Arts Commission. In Transmigração, he presents an installation of images of trees and plants from dry and humid forests of the Caribbean, arranged in dialogue with the environment of Salvador de Bahía. These photographs act as vegetal presences that cross geographies, expanding through space as a constellation of memory and landscape.

Yarimir Cabán Reyes (MIMA)

Yarimir Cabán Reyes  is a singer-songwriter, composer, and creator of the musical persona MIMA, active since the 1990s and known for a hybrid repertoire that weaves together plena, reggae, bachata, dub, and jíbaro popular music. With a distinctive voice and sharp lyricism, they have released two albums —Mima (2005) and El pozo (2011)— and collaborated with ÌFÉ, Rita Indiana, Villano Antillano, and Alegría Rampante, among others. In this project, their participation unfolds as a sensitive invocation of bodies, memories, histories, and territories through a singular performance. MIMA transforms singing into a practice of expanded listening, embodied archiving, and transformative communion.

William Murphy

William Murphy is a fashion designer with over a decade of experience, whose practice celebrates Black, queer, and Latinx cultures through garments infused with technique, memory, and identity. Trained by Carlota Alfaro and Lisa Thon, he has collaborated with artists such as Villano Antillano, Elvis Crespo, and Alyssa Hunter, using fashion as a poetic language and a tool for social transformation.

In the Transmigração project, he designs the garment worn by MIMA during a sonic invocation conceived specifically for the occasion. After the performance, the piece remains in the exhibition space as a sculpture, tracing a sensitive transition between body, object, and territory

 

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