Ipiranga Museum holds premiere of Tata Amaral's film on women's erasure
The Ipiranga Museum will host the premiere of the documentary 'Women Artists, Subverting Submission,' directed by Tata Amaral, on March 7.
The Ipiranga Museum in Brazil is set to host the premiere of the documentary 'Women Artists, Subverting Submission' on March 7 at 3 PM. This new project by filmmaker Tata Amaral, co-directed with Vera Império Hamburger, aims to shed light on the contributions of Brazilian women artists from the 19th and early 20th centuries. The documentary will be shown as part of the third edition of the Cinema no Museu program, and entry will be free, with tickets available at the box office starting at 1 PM.
The 52-minute film seeks to reestablish the narrative around female artists in Brazil who have been historically overlooked, even though they achieved significant accolades, international exhibitions, and media coverage during their careers. The spotlight is on three pioneering artists: Abigail de Andrade, Julieta de França, and Georgina de Albuquerque, whose contributions have been largely marginalized in traditional art history narratives.
Following the screening, a discussion panel will be held featuring José Roberto de França Arruda, the great-nephew of Julieta and a researcher of her work, alongside art historian Ana Paula Cavalcanti Simioni, who has authored a book on Brazilian academic women painters and sculptors. This initiative not only celebrates the achievements of these artists but also invites a broader conversation about the representation of women in the arts, potentially inspiring future generations to acknowledge and support female contributions in creative fields.