Last March, I found myself standing in front of I’m the Other of the Other — an immersive art experience that wasn’t just another exhibit, but a moment of presence and reflection. Located at Casa Bradesco in São Paulo, this exhibition by British artist Es Devlin became one of the most memorable parts of my time in Brazil.

When Art Stops Being a Display and Becomes You
Walking through the doors of Casa Bradesco, I didn’t just enter a gallery — I stepped into a world where art dissolves into experience. The show, open from March 15 to September 30, 2026, invited visitors to engage with space, light, sound, and mirror in ways that felt deeply personal and unexpectedly gentle.
The title — I’m the Other of the Other — comes from a blend of art and anthropology. Curator Marcello Dantas was inspired by the idea that our sense of self is shaped through others: we become “I” only when we recognize that we’re also the other of someone else. This concept wasn’t just a title on a poster — it was woven into every installation I walked through.
What Makes This Exhibition Special
One of the coolest things about this show is how it dissolves the boundary between viewer and artwork. Here are a few of the experiences that stuck with me the most:








📚 Infinite Library
This wasn’t a quiet reading room — it felt like entering a collective imagination. Books and narratives floated around you, suggesting that our stories are never just our own but part of a larger shared tapestry.
🪞 Mirror Maze
The first room that really stopped me in my tracks was a labyrinth of mirrors. Everywhere I turned, my reflection — and fragments of it — multiplied and shifted. It was playful, a little dizzying, and deeply haunting. Who am I when my image is split into infinite versions of myself?
🌌 Falling
This piece made me feel the concept of vulnerability. It wasn’t just visual — it was almost emotional, as though the act of falling had become a metaphor for transformation and letting go.
🌱 Come Home Again
In this installation, I felt grounded. It brought together sounds and shadows to remind you that “home” isn’t just a place — it’s a shared network of lives, species, memories, and histories.
🖼️ Co‑Imagine & Screen Share
These interactive pieces were the heart of the show — literally. In Co‑Imagine, visitors continued drawings that Devlin began, creating a communal artwork in real time. Screen Share felt like a ritual of exchange: images flowed between people and spaces, reminding me that art lives in relation.
Why It Stayed With Me
What surprised me most wasn’t just the breathtaking design or the clever use of technology — it was how deeply human the experience felt. The exhibit didn’t tell me what to think. Instead, it opened a space for questions: Am I defined by myself or by the people around me? How do we connect? What shapes our identity?
I left feeling like I had been inside someone else’s thought — and also inside my own. That’s rare in art.
Planning Your Visit
If you ever find yourself in São Paulo and want an art experience that goes beyond visuals, go see this show. Here’s everything you need to know:
📍 Where: Casa Bradesco — Alameda Rio Claro, 190, Bela Vista, São Paulo.
🗓 When: March 15 to September 30, 2026.
⏰ Hours: Tuesday to Sunday, 12 PM–8 PM.
🎟 Tip: Entry is free on Tuesdays with reservation, and other days may offer discounted tickets.
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