Aracy Amaral Explained

Birth Date:22 February 1930
Birth Place:São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Title1:Director of the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo
Term Start1:1975
Term End1:1979
Title2:Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art, University of São Paulo
Term Start2:1982
Term End2:1986
Alma Mater:
Awards:Guggenheim Fellow (1977)
Spouse:Mario Toral
Children:1
Relatives:Antônio Henrique Amaral (brother)
Tarsila do Amaral (aunt)
Module:
Thesis Title:Tarsila - sua obra e seu tempo
Thesis Year:1976
Discipline:Art history
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Aracy Abreu Amaral (born 22 February 1930) is a Brazilian art historian and curator. Born in São Paulo and raised in Buenos Aires, she worked as an art history professor at the University of São Paulo and director of the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo (1975-1979) and Museum of Contemporary Art, University of São Paulo (1982-1986). A 1977 Guggenheim Fellow, she is an academic who specializes in modernism in Brazil, particularly Tarsila do Amaral.

Biography

Aracy Abreu Amaral was born on 22 February 1930 in São Paulo,[1] Her mother Nadya worked as a diseuse, and her father Aguinaldo Amaral was a civil servant for the .[2] She has three siblings, including artist Antônio Henrique Amaral, and her aunt is painter Tarsila do Amaral.[3] She spent her early childhood in Buenos Aires, moving there due to her father Aguinaldo Amaral's employment with the . She was educated at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, where she got a journalism degree in 1959, and at the University of São Paulo (USP), where she got her master degree in philosophy in 1969 and PhD in Arts in 1975.[4] Her doctoral dissertation was Tarsila - sua obra e seu tempo (1976).[4] She also spent a year at the École du Louvre (1958-1959).

While studying at USP, she started working as an assistant to the director of their Museum of Contemporary Art in 1964, before being promoted to editor of their publications in 1965, a position she held until 1977. She originally worked as a researcher for the São Paulo Research Foundation from 1968 until 1970, a freelancer for clients such as Wesley Duke Lee, Cildo Meireles, Hélio Oiticica, and Mira Schendel, and as a radio host for Jovem Pan in 1972.

In 1972, she started working as a professor of art history at the University of São Paulo Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism, and she was granted her there in 1983. In 1982, she returned to their Museum of Contemporary Art as director, serving until 1986. She also served as director of the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo from 1975 until 1979 and as part of the Prince Claus Fund International Prize Committee from 2002 until 2005.[5] [6] By 2021, she had retired from USP.[5]

As an academic, she specializes in modernism in Brazil, particularly Tarsila do Amaral. She published several books on art history, including Blaise Cendrars no Brasil e os modernistas (1970) and Tarsila: Sua obra e seu tempo (1975).[5] In 1977, she was appointed a Guggenheim Fellow for "a study of international and national influences on the art of Brazil".[7] [8] in 2006, she was awarded the Moinho Santista Award (now the Fundação Bunge Award) in Museology.[9] Writing for ARTMargins, Sofia Gotti called Amaral's works "a vital reference for the study of art history in Brazil", lamenting the lack of English-language translations for her work.[10]

In 2005, she was the general coordinator of Itaú Cultural's Rumos project.[11] She also curated the 2009 Trienal de Chile and 2011 Bienal do Mercosul.[12] In 2021, the São Paulo Research Foundation called her "a pioneer in the field of curatorship in Brazil".[5]

She has a son with her ex-husband Mario Toral, historian and comic artist .[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aracy Amaral . 2024-07-23 . Enciclopédia Itaú Cultural.
  2. Web site: cronologia • chronology . 2024-07-23 . Instituto Antonio Henrique Amaral.
  3. Damian . Carol . 1999 . Tarsila do Amaral: Art and Environmental Concerns of a Brazilian Modernist . Woman's Art Journal . 20 . 1 . 3–7 . 10.2307/1358838 . 0270-7993 . JSTOR.
  4. Web site: Aracy Abreu Amaral . 2024-07-23 . Curriculo Lattes.
  5. Web site: Queiroz . Christina . 2021 . Aracy Amaral: Visionária da modernidade . 2024-07-23 . Revista Pesquisa FAPESP . . pt-br.
  6. ARACY AMARAL CURATES FIRST SHOW WITH WORKS BY CIRAMICISTS OF THE PARAGUAYAN ANCESTRAL TRADITION . Galeria Millan . 2024-07-23 . PDF.
  7. Web site: Aracy A. Amaral . 2024-07-23 . John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation . en.
  8. Book: Reports of the President and of the Treasurer . 1977 . John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation . 131.
  9. Web site: Prêmio Fundação Bunge . 2024-07-23 . Fundação Bunge . pt-br.
  10. Gotti . Sofia . 2016-06-01 . Popau, Pop, or an “American Way of Living”? An Introduction to Aracy Amaral's “From the Stamps to the Bubble” . ARTMargins . en . 5 . 2 . 105–119 . 10.1162/ARTM_a_00150 . 2162-2574.
  11. Web site: Aracy A. Amaral . 2024-07-23 . Editora 34.
  12. Web site: ARACY AMARAL . 2024-07-23 . Alvarez Gallery . en-US.