Tropicália and Beyond

Tropicália and Beyond

18.11.2017

In connection with the screening programme, ‘Tropicália and Beyond: Dialogues in Brazilian Film History’ at Tate Modern (9–12 November 2017), Archive Books released a publication by the same title.

The book, edited by Stefan Solomon, was presented at Archive Kabinett on Saturday November 18th, along with the screening of ‘A Maldição Tropical’ by Luisa Marques and ‘Barravento Novo’ by Bruce Yonemoto and Eder Santos Jr.

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Although the short-lived Brazilian cultural movement known as Tropicália is most commonly associated with music and the visual arts, its sense of playfulness and strategies of appropriation have stimulated many of the country’s filmmakers from the 1960s to the present. The term was first given to a pair of installations by Hélio Oiticica, a song by Caetano Veloso, and an LP released in 1968, featuring artists such as Gilberto Gil, Gal Costa and the psychedelic band Os Mutantes. But according to Veloso, the catalyst for the flurry of creative activity at this time was Glauber Rocha’s landmark film Terra em Transe (Land in Anguish, 1967).
And, while Tropicália was cut down in its prime by Brazil’s repressive military dictatorship, its revolutionary gestures continued to make a mark on cinema in the following decades. Fifty years after its emergence, what is the legacy of Tropicália today? And what is its effect on filmmaking in Brazil? This publication brings together a range of filmmakers and scholars past and present to consider these questions, and to offer multiple perspectives on the history of a major period in Brazilian cultural history.

Contributions by Carlos Adriano, Augusto Barros, Ela Bittencourt, Ivan Cardoso, José Celso Martinez Corrêa, Max Jorge Hinderer Cruz, Albert Elduque, Helena Ignez, Scott MacDonald, Rubens Machado Jr., Pedro Neves Marques, Ricardo Miranda, Jorge O Mourão, Noilton Nunes, Arthur Omar, Eder Santos Jr., Rogério Sganzerla, Robert Stam, Ana Vaz, Caetano Veloso, Ismail Xavier, Bruce Yonemoto.