Saturday, April 14, 2018

SULA COSTA

Anexos11 de abr (Há 3 dias)
para mim
O GATO DE HAVANA / THE CAT FROM HAVANA
Dacio Malta | Brazil | 2016 | Documentary | 2016 | 87min
MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE, April 8 @ 4:30PM
AMC LOEWS 34th St., April 15 @ 2:45PM




SYNOPSIS
The night-club Gato Tuerto is surely the most symbolic Cuban cabaret. For 55 years, it has been the refuge of the so-called intellectual bohemia in Havana. Cuba’s most important musicians have been on it’s little stage, such as Omara Portuondo, Pablo Milanés, César Portillo de La Luz, Meme Solis, Elena Burke, Juana Bacallao and Chucho Valdés, among others, and has been the stage for the world’s largest bolero, being registered in record book Guiness. The documentary tells the story of this cabaret, it’s founders, artists and clients, such as Gabriel Garcia Marques, Caetano Veloso and Julio Cortázar. The café-concert is actually a backdrop to recover the history of Havana’s cultural and night life in over five decades – with all its good and bad times.
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FESTIVALS AND AWARDS
Festival do Rio, Miami Film Festival, Festival Internacional de Guadalajara, Festival del Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano en La Habana, Golden Apricotr in Yerevan, HBO NY Latino Film Festival and the others.
Special Mention ALIVE DOC International Documentary Film Festival, Los Angeles

DIRECTOR
Dacio Malta is a journalist and was born in Rio de Janeiro, where he directed three of the country’s main newspapers: Jornal do Brasil, O Dia and O Globo. In 1996, he wrote and directed the musical “COMEÇARIA TUDO OUTRA VEZ”, which told the life and work of composer Luiz Gonzaga Junior, Gonzaguinha – with great public and critical success. In 2010, he directed the documentary “NOEL ROSA, POETA DA VILA E POVO” about the composer’s career – who died early, at the age of 26, but who left more than 200 songs, many of them success to this day, 70 years later your death. The documentary was initially screened in five episodes on TV Brazil, as a year-end special, celebrating the centenary of Noel Rosa’s birth. The following year, made into a film, he won some awards at festivals in Brazil, including best film and best direction, as well as being screened in Havana, Paris and Japan. In Santiago de Cuba, the documentary was awarded at the Santiago Alvarez Festival.
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Sunday,  Apr 15 - 8:00 & 9:30pm 
NEW BRAZILIAN PERSPECTIVES: HELIO ALVES QUARTET
Billy Newman, host 


Helio Alves, piano;  tba, guitar;  Edward Perez, bass;  Alex Kautz, drums
A native of Sao Paulo, Brazil, pianist Helio Alves combines the rhythmic complexity of modern brazilian music with the edgy energy of contemporary jazz. A resident of NYC since the early '90s, Alves has received high praise as an in-demand sideman with the likes of Joe Henderson, Yo-Yo Ma, Paquito D'Rivera, Airto Moreira, Claudio Roditi, Rosa Passos and Sadao Watanabe, to name but a few.

TOM ZE

Tom Zé



Tuesday, Apr 17
7:30–10pm
DOORS 7:30PM
PERFORMANCE 8PM
Presented in association with
Eulipion Sounds
Tom Zé is a songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and composer who was influential in the Tropicália movement of 1960s Brazil. After the peak of the Tropicália period, Zé went into relative obscurity: it was only in the 1990s, when the musician and label head David Byrne discovered an album recorded by Zé many years earlier, that he returned to performing and releasing new material.



CINEMA
"Kaiser: The Greatest Footballer
Never to Play Football", by Louis
Myles
APRIL 21 - APRIL 28
Tribeca Film Festival




In Brazil in the ’80s, soccer superstars had it all: the adoration of millions of fans, the frenzied attention of the world's sports media, and all the glamor Rio de Janeiro's nightclubs had to offer. But among the ranks of the country's elite athletes, one of the biggest sports celebrities of his generation harbored a secret: He had never played a single game.


The Metropolis in Latin America, 1830–1930

On view: March 22–June 30, 2018


Over the course of a century, rapid urban growth, sociopolitical upheavals, and cultural transitions reshaped the architectural landscapes of major cities in Latin America. Focusing on six capitals—Buenos Aires, Havana, Lima, Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro, and Santiago de Chile—The Metropolis in Latin America1830–1930, presents the colonial city as a terrain shaped by Iberian urban regulations, and the republican city as an arena of negotiation of previously imposed and newly imported models, which were later challenged by waves of indigenous revivals. Photographs, prints, plans, and maps depict the urban impact of key societal and economic transformations, including the emergence of a bourgeois elite, and extensive infrastructure projects, rapid industrialization, and commercialization.
More information:


Being: New Photography 2018

Through August 19




The Museum of Modern Art
Every two years, MoMA’s celebrated New Photography exhibition series presents urgent and compelling ideas in recent photography and photo-based art. This year’s edition, Being, asks how photography can capture what it means to be human.
At a time when questions about the rights, responsibilities, and dangers inherent in being represented—and in representing others—are being debated around the world, the works featured in Being call attention to assumptions about how individuals are depicted and perceived. Many challenge the conventions of photographic portraiture, or use tactics such as masking, cropping, or fragmenting to disorient the viewer. In others, snapshots or found images are taken from their original context and placed in a new one to reveal hidden stories. While some of the works might be considered straightforward representations of individuals, others do not include images of the human body at all. Together, they explore how personhood is expressed today, and offer timely perspectives on issues of privacy and exposure; the formation of communities; and gender, heritage, and psychology.

VISUAL ARTS
Dalton Paula at "2018 T
riennial: Songs
of Sabotage"
FEB 3 - MA
Y 27
New Museum

“Songs for Sabotage,” the fourth New Museum Triennial, questions how individuals and collectives around the world might effectively address the connection of images and culture to the forces that structure our society.

More information:

CINEMA
Retrospective: Joaquim Pedro de Andrade
MAY 2018
International House Philadelphia



In collaboration with Kino Lorber, Lightbox presents a retrospective of the work of Joaquim Pedro de Andrade, one of the most important figures in the Cinema Novo movement that transformed Brazilian film in the 1960s and ’70s. Hailing from a culturally prominent family in Rio de Janeiro, Andrade grew up in close contact with some of the country’s greatest artists, writers, and scholars. Abandoning his university education to pursue filmmaking, he would soon join in the formally and politically audacious Cinema Novo. Andrade’s films combined a sophisticated, modernist approach with an uncompromisingly critical, often outrageous, and uniquely Brazilian sensibility that makes his work every bit as vital today as it was when he made it.

More information:

A Conversation with Aracy
Amaral
and Carlos Zilio on the Legacy of
Tarsila
APRIL
12 @ 7:00 PM
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Sponsored by the Consulate General of Brazil in NY

 

Thursday, April 127:00 p.m.

The Museum of Modern Art


Join us for a conversation about the life, work, and legacy of Tarsila do Amaral, with curator, writer, and art historian Aracy Amaral and artist and scholar Carlos Zilio. The discussion is moderated by Luis Pérez-Oramas and Stephanie D’Alessandro, co-curators of the MoMA exhibition Tarsila do Amaral: Inventing Modern Art in Brazil.

CINEMA
"
Nelson Freire", directed by João
Moreira Salles
APRIL
18 @ 7:00 PM - with Nelson Freire
and Marcelo Lehninger
Americas Society
Sponsored by the Consulate General of Brazil in NY

Film: Nelson Freire

Americas Society
680 Park Avenue, New York, NY
April 18, 2018  7:00 p.m.
From celebrated filmmaker João Moreira Salles, the award-winning documentary on the life and work of Brazilian concert pianist Nelson Freire, who will be in attendance at the screening.
This event is part of Cinema Tropical's new film series, MUSIC+FILM BRAZIL, programmed by Mary Jane Marcasiano. 
The Consulate General of Brazil in New York thanks the Brazilian Music Foundation and Hélio Campos for their support.
In collaboration with:

The Consulate General of Brazil in New York


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