Next Tuesday, July 8 at 7.30 p.m., the exhibition Brasilia 65 Visoes em um Sonho Geométrico, by Juan Carlos Vega, will be inaugurated at the Fundación Pons (calle Serrano, 138), with the institutional support of the Embassy of Brazil in Spain, Instituto Guimãraes Rosa, Instituto Cervantes of Brasilia and the Federal Senate of Brazil.
Architecture is not only structure: it is also movement, dialogue and emotion. This is demonstrated by the photographer Juan Carlos Vega in his new exhibition project, Space, body and geometry, where dance breaks into the architectural landscape of Brasilia to draw an unprecedented visual story. The project, which can be visited in July at the Pons Foundation and in December at the Ortega Marañón Foundation, is one of the most relevant cultural stakes of the year for those who live architecture as a sensory and expanded experience.
The exhibition focuses on Brasilia 65, a tribute to the founding of the Brazilian capital and the artists who made it possible. The second exhibition, From Brazil to the World, looks at the international legacy of Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, whose poetic curves and visionary structures marked an era.