February 11, 2018–June 03,
2018
Tarsila do Amaral
(Brazilian, 1886–1973) is a foundational figure for the history of modernism in
Latin America. The first exhibition in the United States exclusively devoted to
the artist focuses on her pivotal production from the 1920s, from her earliest
Parisian works, to the emblematic modernist paintings produced in Brazil,
ending with her large-scale, socially driven works of the early 1930s. The
exhibition features nearly 120 artworks, including paintings, drawings,
sketchbooks, photographs, and other historical documents drawn from collections
across Latin America, Europe, and the United States.
Born in São Paulo at the
turn of the 19th century, Tarsila―as she is affectionately known in
Brazil―studied piano, sculpture, and drawing before leaving for Paris in 1920
to attend the Académie Julian. Throughout subsequent sojourns in Paris, she
studied with André Lhote, Albert Gleizes, and Fernand Léger, fulfilling what
she called her “military service in Cubism,” ultimately arriving at her
signature painterly style of synthetic lines and sensuous volumes depicting
landscapes and vernacular scenes in a rich color palette. The exhibition
follows her journeys between France and Brazil, through Rio de Janeiro and
Minas Gerais, charting her involvement with an increasingly international
artistic community, and her role in the emergence of modernism in Brazil; in
1928, Tarsila painted Abaporu, which quickly spawned the Anthropophagous
Manifesto, and became the banner for this transformative artistic movement that
sought to digest external influences and produce an art for and of Brazil
itself.
The exhibition is organized
by The Museum of Modern Art and the Art Institute of Chicago.
Organized by Luis
Pérez-Oramas, former Estrellita Brodsky Curator of Latin American Art, The
Museum of Modern Art, and Stephanie D’Alessandro, former Gary C. and Frances Comer
Curator of International Modern Art, The Art Institute of Chicago; with Karen
Grimson, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Drawings and Prints, The Museum of
Modern Art.
Major support for the New
York presentation is provided by The International Council of The Museum of
Modern Art, The Modern Women’s Fund, and by the Vicky and Joseph Safra
Foundation.
Generous funding is
provided by Clarice Oliveira Tavares, Yvonne Dadoo Ader, and by the Consulate
General of Brazil in New York.
Additional support is
provided by the Annual Exhibition Fund.
MoMA Audio is supported by
Bloomberg Philanthropies.
http://press.moma.org/2017/07/tarsila-do-amaral/
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