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This centerpiece of a very large triptych rendered in hues of flaxen yellow and maize depicts a towering woman rising from a lattice of mangrove roots. As part human and part tree, her form is both ascending and anchored. Her skin, mottled in ochre and sienna, reads as both bark and scar, a living record of endurance. Her short, textured black hair frames her face with luminous aquamarine eyes and full lips from which crimson bromeliads blossom, unfurling into the air. Around her throat and ears, similar red petals gather like ceremonial adornments. Her left hand is lifted in benediction or invocation; her right hovers near her chest holding up a red blossom. On either side, interlocking branches and roots braid into a serpentine web, painted in warm earth tones that pulse with quiet movement. Two white herons stand poised among the roots. The composition seems to breathe like a rhythm of rootedness and renewal with each gesture suspended between stillness and becoming. As part of Brazilian artist Rosana Paulino’s “Mangue (Mangrove)” series, this work transforms the mangrove’s ecology into a representation of Black female survival. The woman, both rooted and ascending, embodies the cyclical force of regeneration by portraying the body as terrain through which memory, ancestry, and the natural world interlace. The egret (garça branca) appears here as a threshold guardian, a creature bridging water and sky. In Brazilian cosmology, it often signifies passage, wisdom, and rebirth. Paulino’s practice, grounded in material experimentation and feminist thought, sutures the violences of colonial history with gestures of care and continuity. Born in São Paulo in 1967, she describes her “Mangue” works as “returning to the mud, to the roots that feed us and hold us steady.” In “Garça branca,” the triptych becomes a living altar to resilience like an invocation of the woman who stands, steadfast, where sea and soil converge.
“Garça branca” by Rosana Paulino (Brazilian) - Graphite, acrylic, and natural pigment on canvas / 2023 - Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (Argentina) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #Paulino #MALBA #art #artText #artwork #BlueskyArt #RosanaPaulino #BrazilianArtist