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The Long Roots of Formalism in Brazil
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Credits
Introduction
 Alex Potts
From Formation to Dismantling
1 Strategies of Occupying Space in Brazil, from Tarsila to Oiticica
2 ‘Free Form’: Brazilian Mode of Abstraction or a Malaise in History
3 All This Geometry, Where Does It Come from, Where Does It Go?
4 Trees of Brazil
5 The Situation of Art and the ‘Pensée Unique’
6 Formation and Dismantling of a Brazilian Visual System
From Dismantling to Struggle
7 From the Debate about Formation to Strike as Formation
8 The Indignity of São Paulo
9 Art against the Grain
Against Formalism: Art, History and Criticism
10 Work, Art and History: A Counterpoint between Periphery and Centre
11 Notes on Modernisation, from the Periphery: On David Craven’s ‘Alternative Modernism’
12 Art as Work (Interview)
13 International Benefit Society of Friends of Form and Bulletin on the Brazilian Division
Index of Artworks Cited
Bibliography
Index

Promotional Information

  • Features in Historical Materialism
  • Promotion targeting left academic journals
  • Published to coincide with the annual Historical Materialism conference
  • Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking engagements
  • About the Author

    Luiz Renato Martinsteaches art history at the Visual Arts Department of the University of So Paulo, working also as a researcher associated to the Economical History postgraduate programme at USP. As a visitor, he lectured in Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Spain, France, UK and USA universities, and has published books and articles on modern art, film and the contemporary global crisis's issues.
    is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow based at University College London Institute of Americas. His research focuses on the political economy of Latin America, particularly Brazil and Argentina and has been a visiting lecturer in Argentina, Brazil, Belgium and USA.

    Reviews

    "Martins’ deeply engaged and richly informed reflections on the particularities of the Brazilian situation analyse the vicissitudes of artistic and architectural modernism as it took shape in Brazil in the mid-twentieth century, and its subsequent replacement by an apolitical formalist aestheticism in the postmodern age of neoliberal capitalism."
    Alex Potts, Max Loehr Collegiate Professor, University of Michigan

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