TARSILA DO AMARAL. PAINTING MODERN BRAZIL

 
FEBRUARY 21–JUNE 1, 2025
 
GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM BILBAO | BILBAO, SPAIN
 
Tarsila do Amaral, Urutu, 1928
Oil on canvas, 60,5 × 72,5 cm
Gilberto Chateaubriand Collection, Museu de Arte Moderna, Rio de Janeiro
©Tarsila do Amaral Licenciamento e Empreendimentos S.A.
Photo: ©Gilberto Chateaubriand MAM Rio de Janeiro / Romulo Fialdini et Valentino Fialdini
 

A central figure of Brazilian modernism, Tarsila do Amaral also known as Tarsila (1886-1973) created an original, evocative body of work, drawing on indigenous and popular imagery and on modernizing forces of a rapidly-transforming country.

In the 1920s, moving between São Paulo and Paris, Tarsila ferried between the avant-gardes of these two cultural capitals. Having constructed a “Brazilian” iconographic world, put to the test by the Cubism and Primitivism so in vogue in the French capital at the time, her painting was the root of the Pau-Brasil and Anthropophagic movements, whose search for an “authentic,” multicultural, and multiracial Brazil aimed to refound the country’s relationship with the European “centers” of colonization.

The activist dimension of Tarsila’s paintings from the 1930s and their ability to accompany the profound transformations of her social and urban environment until the 1960s confirm the strength of an oeuvre attuned to her time, always willing to reinvent itself, despite the unstable conditions of the different times and contexts that an emancipated, independent woman artist had to face.