Loading

Children’s Dance

Candido Portinari1932

Projeto Portinari

Projeto Portinari
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Composition in earthy, blue, ochre, green, gray, rose, red, white and black tones. Smooth texture and marked brushstrokes. Composition representing ten children playing a circle game and one watching in an open field, with Brodowski and sky of blue-gray tones in the background. The circle occupies the central area of ​​the composition and is made up of five girls and boys hand in hand. Children are in different positions and wear different clothes, some have shoes, others are barefoot and the ones that face forward have suggested facial features. To the right of the composition outside the circle, boy standing in profile to the left, watching the game. A little further ahead to the right, suggestion of an animal on top of a red wheeled platform and further back, lamppost. The floor is in earthy tones, clearer in the area where children play. In the background, we see part of the city of Brodowski, having on the left a street with three houses and trees. On the right of downtown, across the street, the little church of Saint Anthony and to the right, the houses and trees. Sky represented in earthy gray tones.

Show lessRead more
  • Title: Children’s Dance
  • Creator Lifespan: 1903-12-29 - 1962-12-06
  • Creator Nationality: Brazilian
  • Creator Gender: Male
  • Creator Death Place: Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • Creator Birth Place: Brodowski, São Paulo, Brazil
  • Date: 1932
  • Location Created: Brodowski, São Paulo, Brasil
  • Physical Dimensions: w47 x h39cm without frame
  • Provenance: João Candido Portinari
  • Rights: João Candido Portinari
  • External Link: Projeto Portinari
  • Theme: Brazilian Culture:children's games:play:ring-around-a-rosy, Nature:landscape:Brodowski, human figure:group:children
  • Technique: oil
  • Signature: Signed and dated at bottom right "PORTINARI 19[32]"
  • Painter: Candido Portinari
  • Number: FCO 3518
  • Notes: Last numbers in date are barely legible.
  • Function: Poet Manuel Bandeira, in an article published in 1933, cited this work as representative of “... a rich resource which Portinari has only begun to tap...” [PR 209]
  • Catalogue Raisonné: CR-305
Projeto Portinari

Get the app

Explore museums and play with Art Transfer, Pocket Galleries, Art Selfie, and more

Interested in Visual arts?

Get updates with your personalized Culture Weekly

You are all set!

Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites