Afro-Brazilian Artist Nascimento Leads Tour of His Latest Show

Afro-Brazilian Artist Nascimento Leads Tour of His Latest Show

THE IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE is the subject of Houston-based Afro-Brazilian artist Ibraim Nascimento’s exhibit Reflections, on view at The Jung Center of Houston through May 13.


Born and raised in Cachoeira, Bahia — once a major port for slave labor for the country’s sugarcane plantations and birthplace to such highly regarded Brazilian musicians as Joao Gilberto, and the thundering Samba drum collective Olodum — Nascimento’s work is born out of his Brazilian heritage. It’s also inspired by the new connections he has made since migrating to the U.S. and finding kinship with Houston’s Black and Latinx art communities.

His brightly colored, sometimes surreal portraits of fellow Brazilians, including a series of paintings of children wearing various carnivalesque animal masks, hover in the Jung Center’s exhibition space like memories the artist is compelled to hold onto, with some works purposely left incomplete, as if the subject were hovering somewhere the new world and their native land, and in danger of fading from view.

Tellingly, some of the portraits include small mirrors, each one an “eye” looking at and providing a reflection of the viewer. (Although in one striking painting, “Pivete,” a Portuguese word used to refer to homeless kids, the subject is defiantly covering both eyes with his hands.)

In an artist statement, Nascimento writes, “One of the many struggles we face as immigrants is not being able to see ourselves in the eyes of the people we live with.” Reflections conveys that struggle and allows the empathetic viewer to imagine themselves as a stranger in a strange land. On Saturday, May 6, at 2pm, Nascimento will give an artist talk and tour of the exhibit.

Also on view is Seven, an installation of seven magical realist portraits of Black women by Houston artist Kristi Rangel. Rangel, a self-taught, Houston Coalition Against Hate emerging artist, includes the Ghanaian Adinkra symbol Funtunfunefu-Denkyemfunefu, which represents unity in diversity, in each mysterious, nocturnal portrait. Flowers, butterflies, and several species of North American birds bloom, flutter, and perch around each woman, celebrating the environmental and spiritual interconnectedness of humans and creatures of the natural world.

Art + Entertainment
Thrive & Inspire: Working with Seniors — ‘America’s Best’ — a Joy for Medicare Expert Justin White

Justin White, Founder of Senior Health Services

WHAT IS THE secret to running a successful business? First, you have to have a mission that you care about. I absolutely love helping people understand Medicare! Secondly, I have always succeeded because the agents I work with know that I care for them and truly want them to succeed. I love developing leaders and watching them soar! If I help them get where they want to be, I will never need to worry about me! We all rise together.

Keep Reading Show less

WHAT DOES IT mean to be "rent-burdened"? The phrase describes those who spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing, and it's become an increasingly relevant part of the larger conversation about the American economy in a post-Covid world.

Keep Reading Show less
Home + Real Estate

AS THE HOLIDAYS loom closer with celebrations and travel in the works, now is the time we start thinking about how to feel and look our best.

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places