Geraldo de Barros (February 27, 1923 – April 17, 1998) was a Brazilian painter and photographer who also worked in engraving, graphic arts, and industrial design.[1][2] He was a leader of the concrete art movement in Brazil, co-founding Grupo Ruptura and was known for his trailblazing work in experimental abstract photography and modernism.[3][4] According to The Guardian, De Barros was "one of the most influential Brazilian artists of the 20th century."[1] De Barros is best known for his Fotoformas (1946-1952), a series of photographs that used multiple exposures, rotated images, and abstracted forms to capture a phenomenological experience of Brazil's exponential urbanization in the mid-twentieth century.[5]
^ abO'Hagan, Sean (18 January 2013). "Brazilian blend: how Geraldo de Barros became a master of montage". The Guardian.
^Rocha, Flávia (April 1998). "Concreto e Infinito" (PDF). Bravo (in Spanish).
^Herkenhoff, Paulo (23 October 1987). "A Imagem do Processo" (PDF). Fõlha de São Paulo (in Spanish).
^Gottschaller, Pia; Le Blanc, Aleca (2017). Gottschaller, Pia; Le Blanc, Aleca; Gilbert, Zanna; Learner, Tom; Perchuk, Andrew (eds.). Making Art Concrete: Works from Argentina and Brazil in the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros(Exhibition catalog). Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute and Getty Research Institute / Getty Publications. ISBN 978-1-606-06529-7. OCLC 982373712. Wikidata ()
^Anagnost, Adrian (2019). "Fotoformas: Geraldo de Barros" (PDF). Document Space.
GeraldodeBarros (February 27, 1923 – April 17, 1998) was a Brazilian painter and photographer who also worked in engraving, graphic arts, and industrial...
São Paulo, GeraldodeBarros played a crucial role in the formation of multiple artistic movements and groups within his lifetime. Barros began informal...
"Guiné-Bissau: Rui Duarte deBarros sucede a Geraldo Martins como primeiro-ministro" [Guinea-Bissau: Rui Duarte deBarros succeeds Geraldo Martins as prime minister]...
James Lee Byars (1932–1997), American sculptor/performance artist GeraldodeBarros (1923-1998),painter and photographer,was known for his trailblazing...
Geraldo José Rodrigues Alckmin Filho (Portuguese pronunciation: [ʒeˈɾawdu ˈawkmĩ]; born 7 November 1952) is a Brazilian physician and politician who currently...
Concrete art in Brazil, GeraldodeBarros, and the sister of the Switzerland-based artist Fabiana deBarros. "Lenora deBarros | Artspace". Artspace. Retrieved...
Manoel Wenceslau Leite deBarros (December 19, 1916 – November 13, 2014) was a Brazilian poet. He won many awards for his work, including twice the Prêmio...
(1919–1962), nuclear physicist Gregorio Baro (1928–2012), radiochemist GeraldodeBarros (1923–1998), painter and photographer, known for his trailblazing...
Carvalho, Mario Cesar (April 18, 1998). "Morre aos 75 o artista GeraldodeBarros" (PDF). Fõlha de São Paulo (in Portuguese). Retrieved October 19, 2019. Skanse...
international exhibitions and art movements. After the formal break up of De stijl, following the last issue of its magazine in 1928, van Doesburg began...
Long, China 2017: GeraldodeBarros, for Sobras (Chose Commune) 2018: Paul Fusco, for The Train. 8 juin 1968. Le dernier voyage de Robert F. Kennedy 2019:...
Francisco do Rego Barros Lacerda, 1891-1892 Manuel Pinto Damaso, 1892-1893 José Marcelino da Rosa e Silva [pt], 1893-1896 José de Cupertino Coelho Cintra [pt]...
ACD Edições, 2005, ISBN 972-8855-17-6 Thereza Leitão deBarros, Exposição retrospectiva da obra de Roque Gameiro, Lisbon, 1946. Wikimedia Commons has media...
Geraldo João Martins is a Bissau-Guinean economist and politician who served as the prime minister of Guinea-Bissau from 8 August to 21 December 2023...
and pop music. Originally named Trio Novo, the group consisted of Theo deBarros (bass and guitar); Heraldo do Monte (Viola caipira and guitar) and Airto...
Gomes, Geraldo Veloso, and Jorge Moreno. It was shot in December 1998 in Congonhas, Minas Gerais, and debuted at the 3rd Festival de Cinema de Tiradentes...
part of the concrete art movement, Grupo Ruptura: Anatol Władysław, GeraldodeBarros, Leopoldo Haar, Lothar Charoux, Luís Sacilotto, Kazmer Féjer, and...