Mira Schendel
19 1/2 x 10 3/8 in
In 1964, she began the Monotypes series, in which she made drawings on rice paper. The obsessive yet delicate qualities of these works ranged from a single thin line pressed into a page to dense, teeming layers of marks and symbols trapped between acrylic sheets. Schendel was keenly aware of the barriers that language and culture could create between people.
In 1939, because of her Jewish heritage, the Italian government revoked her student visa. By the time she immigrated to Brazil in 1949, she had lived in three countries and spoke six languages. As a European immigrant to Brazil, a student of philosophy, and a bibliophile, Schendel found her affinities to be more often in line with poets, theologians, and scientists than with the artists in the Concrete-art movements that dominated the art world in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro in the 1950s. In the early 1960s, she continued to delve into the larger philosophical questions of life in her work, while simultaneously pushing at the edges of drawing, printing, and sculpture.