Advertisement · 728 × 90
#
Hashtag
#lasarsegall
Advertisement · 728 × 90
Post image

#LasarSegall

Auto-retrato II.

1 0 0 0
Video

Dezembro de 1988 e #sdds dessa tijucana que enfrentou o pai e parou de dar aula de francês pra estudar teatro e literatura em Paris e se casou com o filho do #lasarsegall: #beatrizsegall #beatrizdetoledo #odeteroitman #valetudo #gilbertobraga #aguinaldosilva #leonorbassères #leonorbasseres #tbt

3 0 0 0
Post image

#LasarSegall,
Retrato de Baby de Almeida, (1927)

2 1 0 0
Post image

#LasarSegall

Portrait of Baby de Almeida, (1927)

2 0 0 0
Post image

#LasarSegall
Meeting (1924)

1 0 0 0
Post image

#LasarSegall

Doppelbildnis Margarete und Zoe, (1917)

2 0 0 0
Lasar Segall was a Lithuanian Jewish and Brazilian painter, engraver and sculptor. His work is derived from impressionism, expressionism and modernism. Frequently, his most significant themes were depictions of human suffering, war, persecution and prostitution. This portrait is of Baby Almeida (Belkiss Barroso de Almeida) who was the wife of Brazilian lawyer, journalist, and poet Guilherme de Almeida. 

She seated in a chair in various shades of gray and brown against an abstract and geometric background composed of blocks of warm and muted colors. Her skin is a pale with touches of pink blush on her cheeks and lips painted in a decorative soft red. She is wearing a timeless striped top in shades of brown, tan, and deeper red-brown. Her hair is a dark, straight bob that frames her face. The simple, clean lines of her hair contrast with the more dynamic brushwork of the rest of the painting. Her hands are gently resting in her lap, with subtle details in the fingers and knuckles. She appears to be gazing off to the side with a look that might suggest contemplation with a hint of melancholy although her posture is leaning-forward thoroughly relaxed.

Guilherme married Baby in 1923 and moved to Rio de Janeiro, where the couple lived until 1925, before ending up in São Paulo where he became the city's best known poet for several decades with over 70 publications of poetry, prose, essays and translations beyond his journalistic work. Together, they were prominent figures in Brazilian Modernism.

Lasar Segall was a Lithuanian Jewish and Brazilian painter, engraver and sculptor. His work is derived from impressionism, expressionism and modernism. Frequently, his most significant themes were depictions of human suffering, war, persecution and prostitution. This portrait is of Baby Almeida (Belkiss Barroso de Almeida) who was the wife of Brazilian lawyer, journalist, and poet Guilherme de Almeida. She seated in a chair in various shades of gray and brown against an abstract and geometric background composed of blocks of warm and muted colors. Her skin is a pale with touches of pink blush on her cheeks and lips painted in a decorative soft red. She is wearing a timeless striped top in shades of brown, tan, and deeper red-brown. Her hair is a dark, straight bob that frames her face. The simple, clean lines of her hair contrast with the more dynamic brushwork of the rest of the painting. Her hands are gently resting in her lap, with subtle details in the fingers and knuckles. She appears to be gazing off to the side with a look that might suggest contemplation with a hint of melancholy although her posture is leaning-forward thoroughly relaxed. Guilherme married Baby in 1923 and moved to Rio de Janeiro, where the couple lived until 1925, before ending up in São Paulo where he became the city's best known poet for several decades with over 70 publications of poetry, prose, essays and translations beyond his journalistic work. Together, they were prominent figures in Brazilian Modernism.

Retrato de Baby de Almeida by Lasar Segall (Lithuanian-Brazilian) - Oil on canvas / c. 1927 - Casa Guilherme de Almeida (São Paulo, Brazil) #womeninart #oilpainting #art #LasarSegall #Segall #artwork #portraitofawoman #womensart #CasaGuilhermedeAlmeida #artoftheday #GeometricArt #FigurativeArt

60 5 0 0
Video

Brasil! Brasil! Aufbruch in die Moderne
zpk.org/brasilbrasil

#Brasil #Art #Modernism

#TarsilaDoAmaral
#AnitaMalfatti
#LasarSegall
#AlfredoVolpi
#VicenteDoRegoMonteiro
#FlávioDeCarvalho
#CandidoPortinari
#DjaniraDaMottaESilva
#RubemValentim
#GeraldoDeBarros

1 0 0 0