‘With a cardboard suitcase in my hand and a pannier on my back’: workers and Northeastern migrations in the 1950s in São Paulo, Brazil

2011 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo Fontes
Keyword(s):  
ARTMargins ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 27-49
Author(s):  
Adele Nelson

This article analyzes the rhetorical and discursive resonance of the claims by artists and art professionals in Brazil in the 1950s of a connection to the Bauhaus. I examine the curricula of two new art schools established in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, emphasizing the role of central figures, including Mário Pedrosa, and the works by artists trained at the schools, and study paintings by Lygia Clark that in part elicited Alfred H. Barr, Jr. in 1957 to dismiss Brazilian contemporary art as “Bauhaus exercises.” Rather than a case of imitation, as Barr suggested, Brazilian actors transformed Bauhaus ideas, mediated by Cold War re-interpretations of the German school and its approaches to artistic education, to articulate tactics of citation and adaptation and to assert a non-derivative, radical conception of modernism.


Author(s):  
Kenneth David Jackson

Vanguard movements in the arts and literature from mid-20th century Brazil are termed neo-vanguard to distinguish them from the historical vanguard movements of the century’s early decades, even though the neo-vanguards share common features with them. These include an open spirit of internationalism, experimentation with form and language, and the use of fragmentation, simultaneity, minimalism, and graphic display. When they first appeared in the 1950s and 1960s, the neo-vanguards were differentiated by a rationalist, materialist, and functional approach to language, letters and art, visible in geometrical abstraction and based on research. The São Paulo poets Haroldo de Campos, Augusto de Campos, and Décio Pignatari formed the most prominent and influential literary group, known as “Poesia concreta” [Concrete Poetry]. Poesia concreta continues to shape and influence vanguard art, literature, and design in São Paulo. Their 1958 manifesto, “Plano-piloto para poesia concreta” [Pilot-Plan for Concrete Poetry], reshaped national poetics while adding an international aesthetic dimension. In Rio de Janeiro, the “Grupo Frente” led by artists Hélio Oiticica, Lygia Clark, and Lygia Pape supported the 1959 Neoconcrete movement and manifesto, defending the position that concrete poetry and art should be less mechanical and more expressive of human realities. Bossa nova introduced a syncopated, polished style that gained international fame through João Gilberto and Antônio Carlos Jobim, and it turned attention toward Brazilian arts. In the 1950s and 1960s, individual authors worked within their own neo-vanguard styles outside of any movement, the most important being João Guimarães Rosa, whose reworkings of language and orality produced the major novel of the century, Grande sertão: veredas (1956), and Clarice Lispector, creator of dense existential consciousness in prose, mainly involving women in crisis. The 1964 military coup changed the disposition of vanguard art into one of resistance, reflected in Cinema Novo, Tropicália, theater, music, popular periodicals, mass culture, and marginal literature. Popular vanguard movements effectively ended, went underground, or adopted more unconventional formats in the 1970s because of political tension. The end of an effusive period of creativity in the 1950s and 1960s was marked by the publication of the collected works of the concrete poets, their inclusion in international anthologies, and a national atmosphere of increased political repression and violence.


Author(s):  
Camila Maroja

One of Brazil’s greatest colorists, Alfredo Volpi (b. 1896, Lucca, Italy; d. 1988, São Paulo, Brazil), immigrated with his parents to Brazil in 1897 and was trained as a painter-decorator by the age of fifteen. This training instilled in him a passion for artistic processes, as evidenced in the painter’s lifelong habit of stretching his own canvases and preparing tempera paint, a technique he embraced after discovering Giotto in an influential visit to Italy in 1950. His initial production is mostly figurative. Noteworthy from this early period are his 1939–1941 marine landscapes made in Itanhaém, following his encounter with the painter Ernesto De Fiori. From the 1950s onwards his artworks became more abstract. He painted the characteristic colonial façades and decorative little flag pennants (literally, bandeirinhas or "little flags"), which poetically evoke popular taste and local tradition. Although his oeuvre cannot be easily inserted into artistic movements, Volpi participated in the unofficial Santa Helena Group in the 1930s, with painters like Mário Zanini and Francisco Rebolo. Additionally, Brazilian Concrete artists identified him as their precursor. Indeed, despite never embracing the theoretical program of the group, Volpi exhibited in the famous National Concrete Art Exhibitions [ExposiçõesNacionais de Arte Concreta] in 1956 and 1957. Other important shows include the May Salon [Salão de Maio] (1939) and the II São Paulo Biennal [II Bienal de São Paulo] (1953), which bestowed on him the national prize for painting together with Emiliano Di Cavalcanti.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura de Souza Cury

This book deals with images of the Ibirapuera Park in the city of São Paulo, favoring a historical perspective and, above all, photographic sources. The main focus lies on photographic representations, because it is believed that the mechanical reproduction of this medium helped to disseminate a certain imaginary about the architectural work, the city and even the country, to the population. The images collected come from important archives and publications – both national and international – in the time period that spans from the 1950s to the 1970s. The research aimed to understand the project of “paulistaneidade” and of national identity that prompted the construction of this monument-park in peripheral socioeconomic circumstances, despite the development the city of São Paulo at the time. The aim of the book is to look into how the architectural, urban and photographic symbols of the Ibirapuera Park helped to produce aesthetic and political sense related to notions of modernity and progress, aiming to transform the urban landscape of São Paulo and of Brazil.


Author(s):  
Rodrigo de Faria

This article examines the debate that took place in São Paulo during the 1st Inter-American Seminar on Municipal Studies, held in 1958, under the coordination of Antônio Delorenzo Neto. The main thrust of the analysis is focused on the discussion amongst the participants regarding the concepts of planning and planification in the session “The municipality in the face of regional planning”, after the presentation of the conference La organización del plan regulador de la ciudad de Buenos Aires y el planeamento del gran Buenos Aires. Similarly, the article also discusses, albeit indirectly and in more general terms, the trajectory, during the 1950s and 1960s, of Antônio Delorenzo Neto, creator of the abovementioned seminar, which occurred at the Instituto de Estudos Municipais da Escola Livre de Sociologia e Política in São Paulo. It was during this period that his original professional career in the field of law approached the field of planning in order to consider municipal development both in Brazil and across Latin America.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
MARCOS VIRGÍLIO

<p><strong>Resumo:</strong> O artigo trata das referências a diferentes localidades de São Paulo identificadas nos sambas produzidos durante as décadas de 1950 e 1960, comparando as imagens de cidade traduzidas por essas diferentes referências. Busca-se, com isso, evidenciar a utilidade de se recorrer ao estudo das representações da cidade nas músicas populares como uma fonte válida e frutífera para os estudos da história da urbanização.</p><p><strong>Palavras-chave:</strong> Samba – São Paulo – Urbanização – Centro – Periferia.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Abstract:</strong> The article deals with references to different locations in São Paulo that are identified in sambas produced during the 1950s and 1960s, and makes comparisons to the images of the city translated by these different references. The aim is to demonstrate the usefulness of the study of city’s representations in popular music as a valid and fruitful source for studies of the history of urbanization.</p><p><strong>Keywords:</strong> Samba – São Paulo – Urbanization – Downtown – Outskirts.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 296-326
Author(s):  
José H. Bortoluci

AbstractThis article examines the question of how architects in São Paulo during the 1950s and 1960s addressed the political nature of their work, and more specifically the connections between their practice and the lives and politics of the urban poor in the context of a rapidly expanding metropolis of the Global South. More specifically, it assesses how they elaborated strategies to articulate the semiotic and material practices of Brutalism and the political repertoire of national developmentalism, initially in its democratic and later in its authoritarian form. The article argues that these architects deployed two semio-material strategies to operationalize the articulation between that political repertoire and the field of architecture: metaphorical indexicality and the impetus for the industrialization of construction. The image of the urban poor reinforced by that political repertoire was marked by a severe distance from their empirical life experiences, which deeply affected the practices of design and construction that progressive architects advanced.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 45-68
Author(s):  
Nadine Atallah

This article introduces in detail the genesis of Egypt’s first participation in the São Paulo Biennial (1953-1954). The story begins with a spontaneous application from a Swiss painter settled in Egypt after having lived in Brazil: Irmgard Micaela Burchard Simaika (1908-1964). Her request soon leads to the project of composing an official delegation to represent the country, at a time when Egypt was going through a period of political change, as the republic was proclaimed in June 1953. Within an artistic landscape deprived of specialized administration, the exhibition’s preparation was associated with several debates to establish who had the skills and legitimacy to select the artworks to be sent to São Paulo. The final list of artists reflects the reality of the Egyptian art worlds in the first half of the 1950s, in which academic personalities mix with a new generation keen to produce art which would stand as modern and authentically national, and with members of foreign elites well integrated into local society. This “group of modern Egyptian art painting, in the words of Burchard, includes a third of women and stands out as one of the most gender balanced pavilions in the Biennial. It thus reveals the important contribution of women to the development of modern art in Egypt and its promotion worldwide.


Author(s):  
Maria Heloisa Martins Dias

This article explores two talented, controversial writers. One Portuguese, the other Brazilian, both fueled by irreverence and provocation in the way they focus on themselves and the world. Natália Correia, a poet, novelist and Azorean playwright (1923-93), whose work emerged in the midst of the Salazar regime, and with a militant political-literary performance with other leading figures in Portuguese culture and literature during the 1950s and 1960s. Her poetry maintains affinities with aesthetic tendencies of Surrealism, although she was not a strict follower of any literary movement. Hilda Hilst, a poet, prose and playwright from São Paulo (1930-2004), was a militant of different nature. She was not linked to any aesthetic programs or literary trends, a singularity that even today defies critics.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document