Charlotta Adlerova

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charlotta Adlerova (born April 8, 1908 in Berlin , † 1989 in São Paulo ) was a German-Brazilian painter , draftsman and illustrator .

life and work

Adlerová was born on April 8, 1908 in Berlin. In 1926 she attended the arts and crafts school ( United State Schools for Free and Applied Arts ) in Berlin-Charlottenburg and studied fashion design with Assaf Kenan (1895–1953) at the Reimann School around 1930 . During this time in Berlin she was still painting expressionistically. This training, which was partly influenced by the Bauhaus , was later reflected positively in her résumé, especially for her work for art directors .

In 1939 she fled from National Socialism and arrived in Santos by ship on February 14, 1939 and settled in São Paulo, where she was naturalized in Brazil. She studied painting from 1952 at Valdemar da Costa and took off in the late 1950s as a participant in the studio abstração of Samson Flexor part. During this time her art became geometrically abstract.

With her work, she was one of the pioneers in advertising history in Brazil, which earned her a solo exhibition in New York City in 1965. She participated in the group exhibitions between 1957 and 1968 at the VI., VII., XIV., XV. and XVII. Salão Paulista de Arte Moderna (SPAM) in the Galeria Prestes Maia in São Paulo and participated in the XI. International Biennial of São Paulo .

Solo exhibitions

literature

  • Editha Hearn (Author), Charlotta Adlerova (Illustrator): You Are as Young as Your Spine. 2006, ISBN 978-1933-480114
  • Carlos Cavalcanti (Ed.): Dicionário brasileiro de artistas plásticos. MEC / INL, Brasília 1974. Volume 1: A a C, p. 37.
  • Wolfgang Pfeiffer : Artistas alemães eo Brasil. São Paulo, 1996, ISBN 1-933480-11-4 .
  • Walter Zanini: História Geral da Arte no Brasil. Instituto Moreira Salles / Fundação Djalma Guimarães, São Paulo, 1983

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Adlerova, Charlotta. In: Canto dos Exilados of Casa Stefan Zweig (Brazilian Portuguese).
  2. ^ Charlotta Adlerová, Palco III. In: masp.org.br. MASP, Museu de Arte de São Paulo , 1957, accessed May 9, 2019 (Brazilian Portuguese).