Pop-up Exhibition 1​​​​​​​
Details
Date: Sunday June 1st, 2025
Opening Times: 11:00 - 18:00
Location: Pop-up Studio 57E4
TREEHOUSE NDSM
T.T. NEVERITAWEG 55-57
1033 WB AMSTERDAM

General info
Visitors are welcome throughout May, June & July (check the About page for updated opening hours). Once a month we will host an exhibition day with a special program to share progress on the project. More info on this below.

Program
Join us for a drink as artist Bruna Souza shares the project progress so far with her research, artistic experimentations, and interviews. In May, she began investigating the Rio Grande do Sul floods of 2024 and the Los Angeles Wildfires of 2025.
Pop-up exhibition space
Pop-up exhibition space
Pop-up exhibition space
Pop-up exhibition space
Progress (2025) - Bruna Souza
Progress (2025) - Bruna Souza
Progress (2025) - Bruna Souza
Progress (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
The River is a Body (2025) - Bruna Souza
Artworks
​​​​​​​Progress (2025)
Bruna Souza
Mixed media collage: paper, photography, acrylic paint, marker, pen
A mixed media collage piece mapping locations where my cousin evacuated in Porto Alegre, Brazil, during the 2024 floods. The artwork includes photos from their daily walks around the neighborhood, capturing the community rescue efforts and monitoring how high or low the water levels were.

When the agricultural industry discusses progress for the country through their development, what are they really talking about? Progress for what, and for who? For the Brazilian economy? To develop the country's foreign exports? And at what cost? Does destruction of the environment and innocent lives justify this "progress" when local residents are impacted so negatively? Do they prioritize financial profit over responsibility? Prioritize agricultural development to export to other countries over feeding their own empoverished population?

It's ironic that we have the words "Ordem e Progresso (order and progress)" on the Brazilian flag.
The River is a Body (2025)
Bruna Souza
Mixed media collage: paper, photography, glue, acrylic paint, marker, pen, colored pencil
This piece is a mix of documentary and personal artistic response to the devastating floods that took place in Brazil in May 2024 as a result of intense rainfall, structural neglect, and environmental exploitation. A mixed-media collage layering imagery, news article excerpts, handwritten thoughts and material exploration. The combination of materials reflects how we formulate our understanding of these events: we're fed information via news outlets, social media, and our own personal experiences.

Photographs that went viral (such as the airplane stranded on the flooded airport runway) and my own photographs from my family's hometown of Porto Alegre years before the flood link my personal connection to the physical spaces that became submerged. Through this work, I invite viewers to question our relationship with the natural world and the motives behind much of its destruction.

In my research, one of the strongest statements that stood out to me inspired the title of this piece: "The river is not just a watercourse - it's a body that lives in dialogue with the Earth." The river is not simply a static container that holds water; the earth and water are affected by what we put into them, by how we treat the environment around it, by how we interact with it. And if we mistreat it, the river is a living body that will react, that will have limits.

The soil of the river Guaíba was overworked after years of excessive agricultural production, exported and sold internationally to "improve" the Brazilian economy. But when the local population suffers from famine and the land of the river cannot absorb the rain, is this really what's best for the land? For its people? Who is really benefitting from the "economic development"?

So often we treat nature as if we are the dominant beings on this planet. But organic matter is affected by our impact, and once we abuse our resources we will be the ones facing the consequences. We are not greater than nature if nature can destroy us.
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