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| Carybé | |
|---|---|
| Name | Carybé |
| Birth name | Héctor Julio Páride Bernabó |
| Birth date | 1911-12-27 |
| Birth place | Lanús |
| Death date | 1997-02-02 |
| Death place | Salvador |
| Nationality | Argentine, Brazilian |
| Known for | Painting, drawing, sculpture, muralism, illustration |
| Movement | Modernism, Social Realism |
Carybé Héctor Julio Páride Bernabó, known by his pen name, was an Argentine-born artist who became a central figure in twentieth-century Brazilian visual culture, notable for painting, engraving, muralism, illustration, and ethnographic documentation. He worked across Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Buenos Aires, New York, and Havana, producing graphic reportage, religious and Afro-Brazilian iconography, and public murals that engaged with Salvador, Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, New York City, and Havana. His long career intersected with figures and institutions across Latin American art, journalism, scholarship, and religious movements.
Born in Lanús in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area, he moved to Argentina’s cosmopolitan hubs where he encountered the cultural networks of Buenos Aires and port cities tied to River Plate. Early exposure to immigrant communities, maritime life, and popular festivals informed his visual vocabulary alongside contacts with artists and writers active in Buenos Aires’s bohemian circles. He received informal training through ateliers and apprenticeships rather than formal academy enrollment, connecting with printmakers, newspaper illustrators at publications in Buenos Aires, and traveling artists from Uruguay and Italy who worked in the region.
Carybé’s professional path combined journalism, book illustration, and mural painting. He contributed drawings and reportage to newspapers and periodicals in Buenos Aires, later producing illustrations for publishers and collaborating with writers and ethnographers in Brazil and across Latin America. His relocation to Salvador, Bahia placed him within networks that included musicians, anthropologists, clergy, and politicians involved in cultural revival projects. He worked with institutions such as museums, municipal governments, and international cultural agencies to realize commissions and to document festivals, rites, and urban labor, linking his practice to broader currents in Modernism and regional social movements.
Recurring themes in his oeuvre include maritime labor, street life, religious ritual, and Afro-Brazilian traditions such as Candomblé and festa practices documented in Salvador. He produced portfolios of engravings and drawings depicting fishermen, port workers, capoeira, and processions, often used to illustrate books by novelists, historians, and anthropologists. Collaborations and intersections involved authors, scholars, and cultural figures from Brazil, Argentina, and the Caribbean, and his images appeared alongside texts addressing folklore, urban sociology, musicology, and historical studies.
Carybé executed murals and large-scale public works for churches, civic buildings, and cultural institutions in Bahia and beyond, integrating iconography from Catholicism, Afro-Brazilian cosmologies, and local histories. His public commissions engaged municipal authorities, ecclesiastical patrons, and cultural organizations in Salvador and other Brazilian cities, creating works installed in chapels, palaces, and community centers. These projects connected him to restoration efforts, heritage campaigns, and mid-century programs promoting regional identity, drawing attention from commissioners, preservationists, and cultural ministries.
Working across drawing, engraving, painting, and sculpture, he combined linear draftsmanship with rhythmic composition, drawing on printmaking traditions and popular graphic arts from Argentina and Brazil. Influences ranged from European modernists present in Latin America, to local Bahian visual cultures, to contemporary printmakers and illustrators active in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro. He synthesized techniques from xylography, linocut, and fresco, informed by encounters with painters, sculptors, ethnomusicologists, photographers, and choreographers who shaped representations of Afro-Brazilian practices and urban life.
His work was shown in solo and group exhibitions in galleries and museums across Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, United States, and Europe, attracting attention from critics, curators, collectors, and cultural journalists. Reviews appeared in periodicals covering visual arts, music, and literature, and his graphic work circulated in book illustrations and cultural magazines. Institutional recognition came through museum acquisitions, retrospectives, and inclusion in exhibitions examining Brazilian modernity, regional identity, and the visual history of Bahia.
Carybé’s legacy endures in collections, civic commissions, and in the visual documentation of Afro-Brazilian religious and popular culture preserved in museums, archives, and publications. His murals and prints continue to be sites of scholarly interest across fields such as art history, anthropology, musicology, and cultural studies, informing research on identity, ritual, and urban labor. Honors and commemorations include local cultural awards, inclusion in museum collections, and tributes by cultural institutions in Salvador, Buenos Aires, and international venues, maintaining his presence in discussions of twentieth-century Latin American art.
Category:Argentine artists Category:Brazilian artists Category:20th-century painters