quinta-feira, 5 de agosto de 2021

BRAZILIAN TILE MURALS

 Ceramic Tile Murals in Brazilian Modernism







According to Roberto Segre (2006), tiles humanized the abstract vocabulary of architecture, recovering a lost tradition, but also bringing a tropical light to buildings with their shining white finish, thus connecting art with the public and allowing people to break from the automatism of daily life and engage in a natural dialogue with architecture.

If tiles brought exuberance to the planes and volumes of the heavy colonial buildings, in modern architecture they provided grace and fluidity to the geometric designs, working as a mediating element between the static form and the environment. – Roberto Segre 

The high temperatures and humidity levels greatly impact the choice of materials so, the fact that they are perfectly suited to the Brazilian climate, providing good protection for exterior walls that are exposed to heavy rains and intense solar radiation, has also helped to consolidate their popularity once and for all.

Although it is considered a decorative element, tiles had their potential increased when they started to be used alongside the architectural project in a close relationship, often from the very first concepts, thus resulting in unity between construction and finishing. However, despite this inseparable connection, as art became an almost mandatory addition to the projects of the time - which included sculpture, painting, tile murals, etc. - Bruand (1999) emphasizes that architecture had the leading role. It was always the architect who decided which role would be assigned to the painter or the sculptor, placing the work of art in the right place. In other words, the artwork would never affect the structural aspect of the building, and its purpose was to enhance the walls to be more than just simple enclosures.

About the emblematic Capanema Palace, pointed out by many as the first example of modern architecture in Brazil and the first to revisit the use of tiles, architect Lucio Costa who was part of the design team states, that the tiles featured on the ground floor and the smooth pattern adopted in the composition of the large murals clearly had the function of softening the density of the walls to take away any impression of structural support, since the upper block is not supported by the walls, but by the columns.

Six of the seven murals in the project were made by Candido Portinari while the last one is by artist Paulo Rossi, and both have greatly contributed to the team's desire to integrate the tiles with the other works of art in the building and "dissolve" the walls on the ground floor to ensure that they were not perceived as structural elements, but exclusively as a building envelope.

Speaking of Portinari's work, it is worth mentioning the famous murals he designed for Oscar Niemeyer's São Francisco de Assis Church, also known as Pampulha Chapel. Different from the Ministry of Education and Health, this time the artist departs from abstractionism and moves towards figurative art. The Pampulha murals are seen as a sequel to the designs in the Ministry, featuring the same pattern of blue and white tiles that echoes the Portuguese colonial style, which given the religious function of the building, seemed all the more natural. The use of tiles in this bold modern project creates an interesting balance between the unique volume and the pictorial scene, working together to build the ambiance of the space.

Another major example of tiles in modern architecture is the Nossa Senhora de Fátima church in Brasilia. This emblematic project by Niemeyer consists of a triangular-shaped building with a concrete roof supported by three columns. The exterior walls of the church are covered with tiles by Athos Bulcão, forming a seamless blue and white pattern. Just like in the Capanema Palace, these tiles are used to accentuate the function of the walls as a non-structural building envelope.

And finally, one cannot speak of modernist tile murals without mentioning the work of Roberto Burle-Marx, who not only worked as a landscape designer but also created about 100 different murals, probably the most remarkable example being his design for the Clube de Regatas Vasco da Gama, a sports club facility at Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas, Rio de Janeiro, in which he covered the back wall with marine motifs, conveying a sense of motion and lightness of water. He also designed the recently renovated murals at the gardens of the Instituto Moreira Salles and the Fundação Oswaldo Cruz.

In this journey through the history of tiles in modern architecture, Maria Cecília Lourenço (1995) explains that there is no doubt that these murals have contributed to modern architecture, either by erasing walls, as Le Corbusier mentioned or by attracting the attention of passers-by, who are somewhat numbed by the scenery of everyday life. The balanced combination of murals and architecture allows the modern symphony to take over the streets and transfer its dreams to the urban environment.

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