Ângela Ferreira

Ângela Ferreira (born 1958) is a Portuguese and South African installation artist, video artist, photographer and sculptor. She spends time in both countries.

Quotes

 * I realized that choosing a building or any kind of built structure immediately gave me a righteousness of place. Architecture rooted the work in the place and had an amazing other quality, which is that, particularly with public buildings, everybody knows them; they belong to everybody in the city.
 * "Interview: Artist Ângela Ferreira Examines Modern Architecture and Colonialism" in [[w:Pin-Up (magazine)|Pin-Up (magazine)]'' Kojo Abudu, (August 2021)
 * I think it’s time to start looking at these buildings as African architecture and no longer putting these tags of Modern architecture from colonial times. Of course, you will never take that history away, but they’ve now belonged to the people that are living in them for much longer than they did during colonial times and so they should be seen as African architecture.
 * "Interview: Artist Ângela Ferreira Examines Modern Architecture and Colonialism" in [[w:Pin-Up (magazine)|Pin-Up (magazine)]'' Kojo Abudu, (August 2021)

Quotes about person/work

 * Ângela Ferreira occupies a special position in the history of artistic approaches to archival practices. One of the pioneers of research-based strategies at the very beginning of the 1990s—before these strategies had a name and long before they became a widespread (sometimes jaded) paradigm—the artist also applied her archival impulse as a new critical tool for sculpture, rooted in expanded and ethnographic procedures. But what marks Ferreira out in the contemporary art world is that her work often concerns the region of sub-Saharan Africa and, more specifically, South African and Mozambican realities inflicted by the troubled history of colonization, post-colonization, and apartheid.
 * [https://www.art-agenda.com/criticism/237939/ngela-ferreira-s-hollows-tunnels-cavities-and-more/ "Ângela Ferreira’s “Hollows, Tunnels, Cavities, and More”" in Art Agenda Reviews'' Sofia Nunes, (12 November 2015)