Carlota de Camargo Nascimento | |||||||
Birth Date: | 7 October 1904 | ||||||
Birth Place: | Aracaju, Sergipe, Brazil | ||||||
Death Place: | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | ||||||
Education: | Escola Nacional de Belas Artes | ||||||
Children: | 1 | ||||||
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Carlota de Camargo Nascimento (Loty) (October 7, 1904 - July 2, 1974) was a Brazilian sculptor and poet. She signed her works as Loty. Loty was one of the first female sculptors in Brazil.
Loty was born in Aracaju, Sergipe, Brazil. She studied in Escola Nacional de Belas Artes under Rodolfo Bernardelli (1852–1931). Loty had one son, Joaquim Carlos de Camargo Costa. She died, aged 69, in Rio de Janeiro. Loty's name is included in the Brazilian Dictionary of Artists (Dicionário Brasileiro de Artistas Plásticos) and in the bibliography of the Art Exhibitions (Salões de Artes Brasileiros) of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. Loty received the Golden, the Silver and the Bronze Medals of the Salão Nacional de Belas Artes. In 1931, Loty participated in the Salão of 1931, a fine arts exhibition for modern artists. Its director, Lucio Costa, made these remarks about Loty:
There is a young artist for whom I reserve a special reference for the great effort and admirable proof of talent: it is Carlota de Camargo Nascimento. Carlota is present in the Salon with a painting of a lady, a head of a child, a bust of a yound lady, two nude studies, all build with sobriety and beauty, and perfect knowledge of the technique. She also brought to the Salon two small nude studies enveloped in a very fine feeling, a harmony similar to that with which the French sculptors treat their subject. These are works that force sculpture to go further to more daring experiments, and Carlota should prepare more pieces, in the same vein, but in larger scale for the next Salons. (VIEIRA, Lucia Gouvêa, Salão de 1931. Marco da revelação da arte moderna em nível nacional. LotyLoty's closest friends included Oswaldo Teixeira, painter and director of Museu Nacional de Belas Artes; the poet Olegário Mariano, who composed the verses for one of her sculptures; Gilka Machado; José Pancetti; and Portuguese sculptor Teixeira Lopes.