Despite
the nature of the collection, which is made up exclusively of donations, the
contemporary art section of the Museu
do Caramulo comprises a valuable group of 19th and 20th-century works,
including painting, sculpture, ceramics and tapestry, that make it possible to
enjoy a detailed look at the development of Portuguese contemporary art,
punctuated here and there with some excellent international examples.
Romeo and Juliet (1870) by Eduardo RosalesMuseu do Caramulo
Fishing village (Unknown) by Jules NöelMuseu do Caramulo
Boat run aground (Unknown) by Jules NöelMuseu do Caramulo
Girl (Unknown) by Daniel ZuloagaMuseu do Caramulo
Stable with calves (Unknown) by Tomás da AnunciaçãoMuseu do Caramulo
Faithful to his creed (Unknown) by Severo Portela JúniorMuseu do Caramulo
Death of a horse (Unknown) by Francisco AriasMuseu do Caramulo
Haystacks (1880) by Artur LoureiroMuseu do Caramulo
Naturalism in Portuguese painting is represented here by the remarkable example of “Haystacks”. Painted in 1880 by Artur Loureiro, this work marked the early days of the movement in Portugal, which was imported rather belatedly from France. The quality and sensitivity of this work highlight the importance of a painter who has since come to be regarded as a relatively secondary artist in relation to the guiding figures of Silva Porto, Columbano, Marques de Oliveira and, inevitably, Malhoa. This latter figure was perhaps the artist who was mainly responsible for the excessively long duration of the movement in this country, resulting essentially from the fact that the seal of approval of both official and private taste was given to his anecdotal tics of including an increasingly rural content in his painting and his clear attempts to please all and sundry.
Home (1864) by António Carvalho da Silva PortoMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait (1907) by Columbano Bordalo PinheiroMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait of Mestre Luciano Freire (1913) by Luís de Ortigão BurnayMuseu do Caramulo
Sewing in the sun (Unknown) by Aurélia de SousaMuseu do Caramulo
One exception to this evident stereotyping, not only of the accepted style of painting, but also of the general taste, was undoubtedly the end-of-century oeuvre of Aurélia de Souza. She provides one of the finest examples of a particular kind of female sensitivity that is closely correlated with the practice of António Carneiro, represented here by one of his later works. Both artists remained aloof and isolated in their artistic strongholds in Porto, and their reflections on the nature of painting were later continued through the work of Carlos Carneiro, the son of the latter artist, and his peculiar form of meditative sensitivity.
Portrait of Maria Carneiro (1920) by António CarneiroMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait of Nuno Carneiro (1927) by António CarneiroMuseu do Caramulo
General Carmona (1934) by Carlos CarneiroMuseu do Caramulo
The artist's studio (1949) by Carlos CarneiroMuseu do Caramulo
Couple by Auguste RodinMuseu do Caramulo
There is no doubt that the work of Rodin was known to these artists, through their apprenticeships or periods of residence in Paris, but perhaps they were unaware of the tellurian force of his eroticising drawings, which the Museu do Caramulo also presents here.
The two sisters (1914) by Eduardo VianaMuseu do Caramulo
The possibilities of the Portuguese avant-garde artists are also shown in this collection, timidly at the internal level by Eduardo Viana, in his “fauve” remembrance of Matisse or Dufy, and internationally through the unique and meteoric work of Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso, who founded himself caught between the assimilation of the “analytical” Cubist influence of Picasso and Braque and the Orphic influence of Delaunay. All of these influences were fused together in a singular style of painting that, in 1913, the precise year of the work exhibited here at the museum, encouraged the artist to pour all of his pioneering energies into abstraction.
Still life (1947) by Pablo PicassoMuseu do Caramulo
Picasso himself is represented at the Museu do Caramulo by an excellent still life, a painful testimony to the troubled period of the Second World War. For almost five decades, this was the only work of the great painter to be publicly exhibited in Portugal. Dufy is also represented by a painting that clearly illustrates his great elegance and joie de vivre, qualities that are also expressed in ceramic form.
Model in the studio (1942) by Raoul DufyMuseu do Caramulo
"Dame" (the carnation girl) (1913) by Amadeo de Souza-CardosoMuseu do Caramulo
Once the tumultuous impetus of early Portuguese Modernism had faded, largely because of the premature deaths of Amadeo and Santa-Rita, the movement was given a second wind, this time somewhat weaker, with paintings of a more mundane content that exhibited an inevitable Parisian influence.
Portrait of Gualdino Gomes (1925) by António SoaresMuseu do Caramulo
In the 1920s, António Soares was the great interpreter of these elegant refinements with cosmopolitan aspirations, clearly represented by the intellectual gatherings at “A Brasileira”, the café where Gualdino Gomes was such a charismatic figure.
Pierrot (1944) by António SoaresMuseu do Caramulo
The painting of this work clearly lingered in the artist’s memory, amidst the “fauve” remembrances of a work by Dufy or one by Van Dongen, as illustrated by a quite remarkable “Pierrot” dating from 1944, the sudden inspiration of a painter who was gradually becoming more and more academic and losing his modernist touch. The same “fauve” influence became linked to a deliberate primitivism in the work of Francisco Smith, an artist with a long Parisian career.
Fishermen's Wives (Unknown) by Francisco SmithMuseu do Caramulo
Faith and empire (1931) by Henrique MedinaMuseu do Caramulo
The model (1933) by João ReisMuseu do Caramulo
Nude (1934) by Henrique MedinaMuseu do Caramulo
Old man's head (Unknown) by Luciano FreireMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait of Professor António de Oliveira Salazar (1933) by Eduardo MaltaMuseu do Caramulo
Soares’s style was undoubtedly much more valid than the cold academic style of Eduardo Malta, officially demonstrated in the “Portrait of Salazar”. This painting is, however, of great sociological interest, and clearly representative of the dictator’s artistic preferences and complicities, equally pursued by the mundane national elite.
Portrait of Amália Rodrigues (1949) by Eduardo MaltaMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait of Abel de Lacerda (1958) by Eduardo MaltaMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait of Luísa Maria (1953) by Eduardo MaltaMuseu do Caramulo
Portrait of José de Figueiredo (1937) by Eduardo MaltaMuseu do Caramulo
Ria de Aveiro (Unknown) by Fausto GonçalvesMuseu do Caramulo
The excavation (1943) by Gisello Santo TulioMuseu do Caramulo
Still life (1945) by Pedro LeitãoMuseu do Caramulo
Demolition at the university - Coimbra (1947) by Thomaz de MelloMuseu do Caramulo
The shrine of Jerez at the sunrise (1951) by Frei MiguelMuseu do Caramulo
Interior of the Charity Hospital in Seville (1955) by Alfonso GrossoMuseu do Caramulo
Roman horseman in Iberia (1954) by Salvador DalíMuseu do Caramulo
At that time, the Surrealist vanguard movement was unknown in Portugal – but one of Dali’s late works has remained at the Museu do Caramulo.
Drawing (1947) by Barata FeyoMuseu do Caramulo
Man and woman (1956) by Martins CorreiaMuseu do Caramulo
Man's trunk (1956) by Martins CorreiaMuseu do Caramulo
Female nude by Georg KolbeMuseu do Caramulo
Drawings for ceramic plates by Othon FrieszMuseu do Caramulo
Study for the "Great Parade" (1954) by Fernand LégerMuseu do Caramulo
Cathedral (Unknown) by Pierre BoscoMuseu do Caramulo
City in ruins (1955) by Maria Helena Vieira da SilvaMuseu do Caramulo
The work of the “Paris School” is superbly demonstrated in the oil painting by Vieira da Silva, displaying her lyrical abstractionist sensitivity.
Palisade (1956) by Maria Helena Vieira da SilvaMuseu do Caramulo
City of towers (1956) by Maria Helena Vieira da SilvaMuseu do Caramulo
Cock's Head (1956) by Jean LurçatMuseu do Caramulo
Small head (1956) by Jean FautrierMuseu do Caramulo
Póvoa (1955) by Júlio ResendeMuseu do Caramulo
Portuguese-British alliance (1957) by Graham SutherlandMuseu do Caramulo
Sigma (1965) by João VieiraMuseu do Caramulo
Study for the Sigma's book cover (1965) by João VieiraMuseu do Caramulo
Untitled (1970) by Manuel BaptistaMuseu do Caramulo
Illusory space (1970) by Eduardo NeryMuseu do Caramulo
Boat (1973) by Armínio Moura PascualMuseu do Caramulo
Composition (1973) by José de GuimarãesMuseu do Caramulo
Untitled (1980) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
Untitled (1970) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
Untitled (1997) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
From the series "Dark Peacock" (1999) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
From the series "Dark Peacock" (1999) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
From the series "Dark Peacock" (1999) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
From the series "Dark Peacock" (1999) by Ana HatherlyMuseu do Caramulo
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