Patricia Golombek was born in São Paulo, Brazil. She attended “Instituto de Educação Caetano de Campos” and “Faculdade de Belas Artes de São Paulo,” where she earned her Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, in 1986.
While at university, she studied under Flávio Império, Renina Katz, and Marcelo Nitsche – architecture professors who paid particular attention to the visual arts. The architecture degree also promoted discussions in the fields of Philosophy, Anthropology and Sociology, which would later frame the concepts behind the artist’s body of work. Throughout her years at “Belas Artes,” Patricia gained work experience with graphic design, screen-printing, and photography.
After earning her degree, Patrícia Golombek frequented painter and art critic Ernestina Karman’s studio. She was under her tutelage from 1987 to 1990. It was only after seven years studying that Patricia did her first individual exhibition, in 1994. She considers this the beginning of her career. In 2004, she published her book about her ten years of work.
Throughout the years, Golombek participated in countless art exhibits, not only individual, but also in a group, and both in Brazil and abroad. Some of these include the ARCO Madrid, Art Marché Contemporain, Art NY, Art Miami, Art Paris. Her work has been praised and awarded at mam-the “Museu de Arte Moderna”, and MAC the “Museu de Arte Contemporânea”, both in São Paulo.
In 2011, Golombek published her book “Baixinha de uma figa, não!” which celebrated Brazil in the 1970s and all its peculiarities. In 2014 she curated an exhibit about her high school’s rich history, entitled “Ramos de Azevedo e a Escola Caetano de Campos,” in São Paulo’s historical archives.
In 2016 The University of São Paulo published her book about the school, which was the result of four years of extensive research.
About the Work
Patricia Golombek’s work is an analytical study of architecture; the structures and solutions implemented by architects from around the world. The artist’s own architectural background enables her to translate the language used by architects into visual representations of their creative processes.
By bringing floor plans and initial design elements to the forefront of her work, Golombek rescues architectural details that are often forgotten about once construction is completed. The artist dissects select components of the architect’s work, shows spatial solutions, and often compares projects by different architects in the same piece. The language employed by Golombek is not strictly a copy of the original, but rather a reference to the architect’s ouevre. As such, the artist’s goal is to highlight the vocabulary and specific traits that are attributable to the same architect and found across their body of work.
Golombek uses a plurality of media in her analysis, including paint on canvas, acrylic plates, cement, gold, silver and even copper on rubber. Her utilization of the suspended, overlapping acrylic plates are truly an exercise in perspective, as they portray different architectural solutions relative to the viewer’s own distance from the piece. The artist also develops three-dimensional works using floor plans as her stimulus.
The creative process
In her first individual exhibition, in 1994, at “A Hebraica Galeria,” the artist used different graphic symbols placed in a particular sequence that suggested they were messages one could decipher. From this point onwards, the artist became particularly interested in manuscripts, symbols, and words, which became a theme in her work for years to come.