Anthropophagy in São Paulo's Cold War

© 2013 ARTMargins and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The first biennial founded outside Venice opened in São Paulo Brazil in 1951, providing a fulcrum between "dependency" and "developmentalism" (to use economic terms). In terms of art history, it presents a useful an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jones, Caroline A
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MIT Press - Journals 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/134638
Description
Summary:© 2013 ARTMargins and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The first biennial founded outside Venice opened in São Paulo Brazil in 1951, providing a fulcrum between "dependency" and "developmentalism" (to use economic terms). In terms of art history, it presents a useful anomaly in which an international style ("concrete abstraction," a European import) was used simultaneously to eradicate local difference and to declare a cosmopolitan, up-to-date Brasilidade (Brazilianness). More crucially, I argue that the São Paulo Bienal was the precondition for the newly rigorous conceptualism that followed, as Brazilian artists in the late '60s rejected "Concretismo" to craft a new world picture, radically transforming margin and center through the profoundly theoretical practice of antropofagia - cultural cannibalism.