Panel

Tropicália: The Emergence of a Brazilian Counterculture

Oct 19, 2006

7:00–9:00pm ET

The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center

This is the first of four panels at various New York institutions focusing on the political climate in Brazil during military rule in the late 1960s, and the visual art, literature, music, cinema, architecture, and design created in response, reaction, and resistance to the authoritarian regime. Organized in conjunction with the exhibition Tropicália: A Revolution in Brazilian Culture at the Bronx Museum.

This first panel will address pivotal issues that inform the Tropicália exhibition including the clash between the progressive agenda set forth in the 1950s by Brazilian president Kubitscheck, the repressive period initiated by the 1964 military coup, the search for an inclusive Pan-American aesthetics, and the embrace of “antropofagia” (cultural cannibalism) in the 1960s proposed by poet Oswald de Andrade’s 1920s manifesto.

Moderator 
Sergio Bessa, Director of Education, The Bronx Museum of the Arts

Participants
Carlos Basualdo, Curator of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia Museum of Fine Art
Claudia Calirman, faculty member, Parsons The New School for Design
Christopher Dunn, Chair, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Tulane University