-

@ CBS News Entertainment
2025-06-09 20:39:44
nostr:nprofile1qy3hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtt5v4ehgmn9wshxkwrn9ekxz7t9wgejumn9waesqgps9ty0jyhkn5wshjcvepycph8jk3aa9vcw52kjd3ldx9myxtl0vg7mxcuy
https://assets1.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2018/03/11/f0c8dd20-e314-4fc8-84a5-3370237575ff/thumbnail/1200x630/50a5a78893da99cbe38da3906ecbdf28/0311-sunmo-tarsilabrazilianart-1519162-640x360.jpg?v=47da7f60d670305b40b7371b438c2af0
In her native country, all you need to say is her first name - Tarsila - for people to recognize the woman known as "the Picasso of Brazil." But Tarsila do Amaral (1886-1973) is little-known in North America, despite her revolutionary art. Faith Salie visits an exhibition (now showing at New York City's Museum of Modern Art) of Tarsila's "cannibalist" paintings, which took the tropes of Western European art and turned them into something extremely Brazilian.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/tarsila-the-mother-of-brazilian-modern-art/