tarsiliano

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Portuguese

Etymology

From Tarsila +‎ -iano (-ian).

Pronunciation

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /taʁ.si.liˈɐ̃.nu/ , (faster pronunciation) /taʁ.siˈljɐ̃.nu/
    • (São Paulo) IPA(key): /taɾ.si.liˈɐ̃.nu/ , (faster pronunciation) /taɾ.siˈljɐ̃.nu/
    • (Rio de Janeiro) IPA(key): /taʁ.si.liˈɐ̃.nu/ , (faster pronunciation) /taʁ.siˈljɐ̃.nu/
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /taɻ.si.liˈɐ.no/ , (faster pronunciation) /taɻ.siˈljɐ.no/
 

Adjective

tarsiliano (feminine tarsiliana, masculine plural tarsilianos, feminine plural tarsilianas)

  1. (relational) of Tarsila do Amaral (1886–1973), Brazilian modernist painter best known for cofounding the anthropophagic movement
    • 2019 April 3, “Com Abaporu de volta ao Brasil, Exposição no MASP traz a Tarsila do Amaral ‘popular’”, in O Globo:
      O “popular” tarsiliano aparece em telas como o “Manacá”, onde as “cores pobres” retratam uma planta usadas pelos indígenas com fins curativos, e “Cuca” (1924) pintada apenas três anos depois de Monteiro Lobato arrancá-la do folclore e lançá-la na literatura.
      The Tarsilian “popular” appears on canvases such as “Manacá”, where the “poor colors” depict a plant used by the Indigenous for curative purposes, and “Cuca” (1924) painted only three years after Monteiro Lobato plucked it from folklore and launched it in literature.