João Câmara

João Câmara Filho, born in João Pessoa, Paraíba (Brazil), in 1944, is a Brazilian painter. He lives and works in Olinda, in the state of Pernambuco.

The artist thinks of himself principally as a painter, but has also extensive work in lithography.

João Câmara produces individual works and also theme series.

He has created three theme series. "Scenes from Brazilian Life", produced between 1974 and 1976, comprises 10 paintings and 100 lithographs on the theme of the Vargas period in Brazilian History (Getúlio Dorneles Vargas, 1882-1954, was president and dictator of Brazil). "Ten Love Affairs and a Painting by Camara", produced between 1976 and 1983, consists of a source book (lithographs), a triptych, 10 large paintings, 70 lytographs, 22 assemblages and three objects.Two Cities, produced between 1987 and 2001, consists of 38 paintings and 18 objects.

More information on João Câmara and his works can be found in his website.

Bibliography on the artist

  • Cenas da Vida Brasileira. Frederico Morais, 1980.
  • Dez Casos de Amor - Teoria e corpo do pintor secreto. Frederico Morais, 1983.
  • João Câmara'. Jacob Klintowitz, 1993.
  • João Câmara - O Revelador de Paradoxos Político-Sociais. Almerinda da Silva Lopes, 1995.
  • João Câmara - Trilogia. Antologia. Takano Editora, 2003.
gollark: Population density is generally higher too though, I think.
gollark: Plus, significant amounts of functional technology (and buildings!).
gollark: Depending on the particular apocalypse, there might be a much bigger population around than there was then, at least for a while.
gollark: Can you not just get bottlecaps separately?
gollark: That probably works best in advanced, functional economies like the ones you won't have after an apocalypse.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.