Listening to the Echoes of the South Atlantic Listening to the Echoes of the South Atlantic | Page 12

recent music, with its roots in Macumba and Catimbó indigenous music traditions, helps to invoke the respective spirits while Cássio Bomfim styles and directs the performers to embody these different spirits. Throughout his work, Cássio Bomfim devises a fictional cosmology by exploring the nuances and similarities between the codes, rituals, and archetypes of the Brazilian Umbanda religion. As he explains it, during the colonial era, Portugal and Spain forbade all religious practices that deviated from the Catholic Church. It was within this context that religious syncretism developed, which involved translating spiritual rituals, gods, and ritualistic acts of indigenous and African origin into Catholic codes, in order to ensure their continued existence and veneration. This phenomenon contributed to the convoluted relations between Catholic saints and the Orishas, the Yoruban gods, and other African cosmological beliefs. Each Orisha became associated with a saint, or even several saints. The Exu, on the other hand, are messengers in the Candomblé religious tradition, who are called on to mediate between the material and immaterial worlds, thereby establishing communication between the two sides. In Umbanda, the Exu plays a pivotal role on streets, at cemeteries, and in road crossings. Situating these beliefs within a contemporary context, Bomfim integrates the motoboy figure into his narratives, the ubiquitous figure of transport and communication in Brazil, basically understood as an Exu in a contemporary guise. Bomfim constructs narratives and situations that raise awareness about the need to challenge historical and cultural stigmas. His interest in Afro-Brazilian, Christian, and Indian cultural and religious practices and rituals, northern Brazilian folklore and pop culture, combined with contemporary art practice and handcrafted garments, has resulted in colorful, humorous, and also deeply spiritual works that ask us to question Western-centric narratives. (Left and Right) Cássio Bomfim Salve Exu Motoboy. Funk carioca, a musical genre with very specific sociopolitical and cultural implications, is the recurring soundtrack of Bomfim’s work. With its distinct street vibe that brings to mind the urban sensibility of reggaeton heard throughout the Spanish-speaking Caribbean and Latin America, funk carioca speaks powerfully, and specifically about life in Rio’s concrete jungle. Sometimes referred to as favela funk, funk carioca was born in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, and is inspired by Miami bass and gangsta rap