Tag: dalton paula
Sertão Negro Studio and School of Arts: a project for the future in the center of Brazil
Artistic-cultural space in the capital of Goiás proposes dialogues between visual arts, backlands and the cerrado based on traditional knowledge of Afro-Brazilian and African origins
At Galeria Estação, “Reversos e Transversos” seeks to dissolve the dichotomy between popular and erudite art
Curated by Ayrson Heráclito, the exhibition establishes parallels between popular artists segregated by the art system and established names, with whom they maintain approximations, in different biennials, over seven decades
Curated by Moacir dos Anjos, the exhibition “Necrobrasiliana” arrives in Recife this Thursday (15)
On display at Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, the show houses 26 works by 12 contemporary artists, who reinterpret Brazil’s colonial memory
MASP presents exhibitions by Joseca Yanomami and Dalton Paula
Openings take place on July 29 and are part of the museum’s biennial program dedicated to Brazilian Histories
“Gift”: a publication that emerges from caring and dialogue
Conceived by Anna Maria Maiolino and Paulo Miyada in response to the reality of social distancing, Presente brings together exchanges of correspondence between curators, artists and researchers such as Lisette Lagnado, Tania Rivera and Dalton Paula
“Black Encyclopedia”: a book of many hands, minds and lives
Organized by Flávio dos Santos Gomes, Jaime Lauriano and Lilia Schwarcz, Enciclopédia Negra confronts the historiography that denies visibility to the contributions of black people; publication also unfolds in an exhibition at the Pinacoteca
Book presents a promising spectrum of visual arts through the selection of 20 artists
Bringing together analyzes from 14 critics and curators of different nationalities, 20 in 2020, the artists of the next decade: Latin America seeks to answer who will...
Agenda: Check out the highlights for the week April 28 to May 4
Take advantage of the holiday to visit some of the most important exhibitions and other activities in the art world in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Fortaleza, Belo Horizonte... and (why not?) New York