Brazil 'bullet' artist enjoys fame in pro-gun Bolsonaro era | Inquirer ºÚÁÏÉç

ºÚÁÏÉç

Brazil ‘bullet’ artist enjoys fame in pro-gun Bolsonaro era

/ 10:56 AM June 28, 2019

Brazilian artist Rodrigo Camacho, 40, works in one of his art pieces made with bullets at his atelier, located at his home garage, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 24, 2019. (Photo by Mauro Pimentel / AFP)

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — “I don’t know much about arms, I know art,” says Rodrigo Camacho as he wields a replica AK-47 assault rifle that he made out of bullet casings in his Rio de Janeiro garage.

A fervent admirer of the police, military and President Jair Bolsonaro, the heavily tattooed Brazilian artist creates pictures and sculptures out of ammunition casings discarded by police during training or by sport shooters.

Article continues after this advertisement

“My intention is to show that each one of these pieces passed through the hands of a police officer, a soldier, a sergeant, people who train to defend us,” Camacho, 40, tells AFP.

FEATURED STORIES

In his workshop — a brightly-lit garage next to his two-story house, which he shares with his wife and black Labrador called Prince — Camacho stores thousands of used casings, fuses and projectiles in wooden boxes.

With glue and the skill of a former architecture student, Camacho spends many hours transforming the bits of metal into effigies whose true form is only visible form a distance.

Article continues after this advertisement

“Some people compare my work to trench art (pieces sculpted by soldiers with remnants of ammunition), but I just consider myself to be a Brazilian artist who believes in his country,” Camacho says in a gentle voice that belies his tough image.

Article continues after this advertisement

It is a conviction literally etched on his skin, with the musical score of the national anthem tattooed around his left forearm.

Article continues after this advertisement

His work features portraits of politicians of all stripes — including far-right Bolsonaro and a leftwing governor in the northeast — police and military symbols, replicas of AK-47s and even a chair made entirely from bullets that was inspired by the popular “Game of Thrones” television series and displayed at an international arms fair in Rio earlier this year.

“I work with controversial things and people,” Camacho admits.

Article continues after this advertisement

Tribute to ‘real heroes’

Camacho began working with bullets and casings 18 months ago after visiting the Rio headquarters of BOPE, a special operations unit of the military police which is often deployed in the city’s crime-ridden neighborhoods.

Before then he had done carpentry and made rustic decorations on request.

“A deputy commander friend in BOPE invited me to the headquarters to make a bench out of pallets,” he says.

“Seeing the cartridges on the ground gave me the idea of using them to make” the group’s logo.

The intimidating image — a skull pierced with a dagger superimposed on two handguns — was used to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the elite unit.

Camacho’s newfound fame only increased when he gave Bolsonaro one of his portraits of the president.

Camacho pulls out his cellphone to proudly show the video of the moment he handed Bolsonaro the piece — the president’s serious face in gold and black bullet casings, framed by the outline of Brazil.

“The first time that I saw him, I looked him in the eye and sensed his conviction. God willing, he will change the country, not from one day to the next but in three years,” Camacho says of Bolsonaro, a former army captain who took power in January on a promise to relax gun laws and crack down on crime.

Camacho is also an unabashed admirer of Rio de Janeiro state Governor Wilson Witzel, who has applauded the deployment of snipers in the fight against drug traffickers and even suggested he would like to use missiles against criminals.

“Rio needs a strong arm,” says the artist, who gifted a larger-than-life portrait to the controversial governor.

Following media coverage of the Bolsonaro and Witzel portraits, Camacho has been inundated with orders, mainly from police and military units looking to decorate their bases with pieces exalting their work.

But as most of his work ends up being unpaid — in many cases in exchange for the bullet casings — Camacho is looking for sponsors, public or private.

His favorite piece, made for a seminar on police deaths and injuries in Rio, shows the silhouette of an officer on crutches saluting the grave of a fallen colleague.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the and acknowledge that I have read the .

“They are the real heroes,” says Camacho.  /muf

EDITORS' PICK
usa
entertainment
business
entertainment
business
globalnation
TAGS: art, Brazil, Politics, weaponry

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the and acknowledge that I have read the .

© Copyright 1997-2024 ºÚÁÏÉç | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies.