brazilwonders:Abaporu (from Tupi-Guarani language ‘aba’ and ‘poru’, “the man thateats”) is a paintin
brazilwonders:Abaporu (from Tupi-Guarani language ‘aba’ and ‘poru’, “the man that eats”) is a painting in oil on canvas by Brazilian painter Tarsila do Amaral, painted in 1928 as a birthday gift to the Brazilian writer Oswald de Andrade, her husband at the time.Today it is the most valued Brazilian screen in the world, reaching the value of $1.5 million, paid by the Argentine collector Eduardo Costantini in 1995. It’s exposed at the Latin American Art Museum of Buenos Aires (Spanish: Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires, MALBA) in Buenos Aires, Argentina.The composition: one man, the sun and a cactus – inspired Oswald de Andrade to write the Anthropophagite Manifesto and consequently create Anthropophagic Movement, intended to “swallow” European culture and turn it into something culturally very Brazilian. -- source link