“One day, like the water, the land, beaches, and mountains will belong to all,” prophesized Brazilian modernist architect Oscar Niemeyer, whose words are affixed to the volcano-shaped theater that he designed in Le Havre. That day, as described by the socialist designer, has not come. The stifling of imagined egalitarian worlds, in particular those envisioned by Niemeyer and his contemporary, the landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx, formed the basis of Mai-Thu Perret’s solo exhibition “Les Etangs” (12/15–1/31) at Le Portique Centre Regional d’Art Contemporain du Havre.
For over two decades, Perret has been probing utopian notions in her narrative about an all-female anti-capitalist commune, The Crystal Frontier (1999–), which she presents in the form of texts, sculptures, tapestries, and paintings. In “Les Etangs,” however, there was no apparent story. Instead,…