Exhibition Highlights the Plural Strength of Brazilian Art and Authorial Design
Brazilian art and authorial design find, in an architecture exhibition in Brasília—the country’s capital that breathes art—a stage where memory and affection intertwine with contemporaneity. Each space becomes a poetic gesture that transcends mere function, revealing the identity of its creators and reaffirming the power of a nation that transforms its roots into aesthetic language.
Eliene Lucindo presents Between Dream and Awakening, a gallery-refuge inspired by the theme Sowing Dreams. Amid soft lights and natural aromas, never-before-seen photographs by Celso Junior—such as the image of the pequi, a symbol of resistance and ancestry—invite visitors to slow down and feel.

Photographer: Edgard Cesar
In the same spirit, Giovanna Leal unveils Living Permanecer, an environment that unites architecture and spirituality. An olive tree symbolizes peace and hope, while the curated selection includes a painting by Brasília-based artist Bella Salvati— a contemporary work that translates silence and introspection into delicate nuances.

Photographer: Everton Lopes
In Ótica, by Juliane Almeida and Mateus Zaidan, collective living meets nature. Signed pieces by Fabrício Ronca and Samuca Gerber, both from Salva, embody sophistication and Brazilian identity, while works by Moacyr Travaglia and Sonia Ebling expand the cultural dimension of the space, balancing sculptural strength with the elegance of simplicity.

Photographer: Edgard Cesar
With a focus on care, Alessandra Lima Oliveira, from Tudo Arquitetura, designs the Aesthetics Clinic, where fluid curves symbolize the pathways of dreams. Sculptures and paintings by Sanagê Cardoso, Sandro Gos, Leopoldo Martins, and Sonia Ebling reinforce the fusion of art, well-being, and purpose.

Photographer: Edgard Cesar
In Loft Breton Raízes, Márcia Montenegro creates a sensorial refuge that evokes ancestry and belonging. Breton furniture, featuring creations by designers such as Larissa Perna, Fernanda Marques, Luisa Moysés, and Karol Suguikawa, composes a space of tactile, welcoming forms.

Photographer: Edgard Cesar
Meanwhile, in Loft Z, George Zardo, in partnership with Evviva, presents the Anima line: freijó wood in contrast with light tones, revealing the encounter between minimalism and emotional warmth—a space where sophistication translates into comfort.

Photographer: Edgard Cesar
Rick Hudson dives into Brazilian purification rituals at the concept store Olfati. Inspired by the banho de cheiro ritual, the environment envelops visitors in aromas and textures, highlighted by a hand-painted floor by Érica Saraiva—an artwork that transforms the ground into poetry and pathway, as though each step were also a gesture of memory and transcendence.

Photographer: Edgard Cesar
Through paintings, sculptures, furniture, and surfaces, CASACOR Brasília reaffirms Brazilian authorial design as a poetic territory, where art beats in multiple expressions, traversing the gaze, the touch, and the soul.
Editor Brazil: Leonardo Loreto (@leonardoloreto)
Writer: Gillian Caetano (@gilliancaetano) , (@gcaetanocomunicacao)





