Publication: O cinzel de além-mar: Entalhadores portugueses no Brasil setecentista.
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Rosada, Mateus
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Este texto aborda a transferência de ideias e
princípios compositivos de Portugal para o Brasil
através das obras realizadas por três entalhadores ativos no Estado de São Paulo durante o século XVIII: Luiz Rodrigues Lisboa (Portugal, s.d. ¿ São Paulo, Brasil, 1761), Bartholomeu Teixeira Guimarães (Felgueiras, Portugal, ca.1738 ¿ Itu, Brasil, 1806) e José Fernandes de Oliveira (ativo em São Paulo na década de 1790). O primeiro, atuante na cidade de São Paulo e redondezas, foi o introdutor local do joanino, segunda fase do barroco luso-brasileiro. O segundo já é artista de padronagem rococó e se estabelece em Itu, sendo que o último é provavelmente seu discípulo. A partir da análise de documentos e imagens, pretende-se demonstrar o quão portuguesa é a talha paulista e o quão originais foram as variações locais do padrão trazido da metrópole por esses artífices.
This text discusses the transfer of ideas and compositional principles from Portugal to Brazil by three engravers active in the Brazilian state of São Paulo during the eighteenth-century: Luiz Rodrigues Lisboa (Portugal, s.d. - São Paulo, Brazil, 1761), Bartholomeu Teixeira Guimarães (Felgueiras, Portugal, ca.1738 - Itu, Brazil, 1806), and José Fernandes de Oliveira (active in São Paulo in the 1790s). Lisboa, working in the city of São Paulo and surrounding areas, introduced the "joanino", the second phase of the Portuguese-Brazilian baroque, to the area. Guimarães was already a rococo artist who established himself in Itu, and Oliveira was probably his disciple. Based on our analysis of documents and images, we intend to demonstrate the Portuguese origins of São Paulo woodcarving and the originality of the local variations brought from the metropolis by these craftsmen.
This text discusses the transfer of ideas and compositional principles from Portugal to Brazil by three engravers active in the Brazilian state of São Paulo during the eighteenth-century: Luiz Rodrigues Lisboa (Portugal, s.d. - São Paulo, Brazil, 1761), Bartholomeu Teixeira Guimarães (Felgueiras, Portugal, ca.1738 - Itu, Brazil, 1806), and José Fernandes de Oliveira (active in São Paulo in the 1790s). Lisboa, working in the city of São Paulo and surrounding areas, introduced the "joanino", the second phase of the Portuguese-Brazilian baroque, to the area. Guimarães was already a rococo artist who established himself in Itu, and Oliveira was probably his disciple. Based on our analysis of documents and images, we intend to demonstrate the Portuguese origins of São Paulo woodcarving and the originality of the local variations brought from the metropolis by these craftsmen.




