GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Tarsila do Amaral

Tarsila do Amaral

Brazilian modernist painter and a key architect of Anthropophagy in art

BrazilBorn 1886 · Died 1973creatorGrupo dos CincoAnthropophagic movementClube dos Artistas Modernos
40
LOW

of 100 · stable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent

Standing

40/100

Raw Score

33/85

Confidence

63%

Evidence

Strong with contested interpretation

About

Tarsila's public record is strongest where art meets national imagination: she helped build a distinct Brazilian modernism and, after personal and political shocks, turned toward workers and inequality. The main caution is that her social concern is real but partly filtered through elite distance, and evidence for private worship and routine charity remains thin.

Observable behavior supports a mixed-but-meaningful profile: major cultural contribution, some real social concern, and strong resilience under financial and political pressure, but too little public proof of devotional discipline or direct service to rate the record strongly aligned.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview24%(6/25)
Contribution to Others37%(11/30)
Personal Discipline20%(2/10)
Reliability60%(3/5)
Stability Under Pressure73%(11/15)

Tarsila's record shows major cultural contribution and real pressure-tested endurance, with meaningful but uneven social concern; low observability around belief, worship, and direct service keeps the alignment mixed rather than strongly positive.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god2/5

Some public evidence suggests religious awareness, but accessible proof is thin and indirect.

Belief in accountability last day1/5

No strong public record was found on explicit moral-accountability teaching beyond general seriousness.

Belief in unseen order1/5

Her symbolic and dreamlike work does not by itself prove a specific theistic unseen-order commitment.

Belief in revealed guidance1/5

Public sources do not provide enough grounded evidence of scripture-guided life to score higher.

Belief in prophets as examples1/5

Accessible evidence on prophetic modeling is minimal.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives1/5

The public record is light on family-duty evidence beyond biographical basics.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people1/5

No strong public evidence of sustained work in this area was found.

Helps the poor or stuck4/5

Workers and Second Class are strong public evidence that class hardship became a serious subject of her work.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people1/5

Direct evidence in this category is sparse.

Helps people who ask directly1/5

Accessible public evidence does not show a repeated pattern here.

Helps free people from constraint3/5

Her social phase and anti-war/worker focus show concern for structural constraint, though mainly through art rather than direct liberation work.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently1/5

Routine devotional practice is not well documented in accessible public sources.

Gives obligatory charity1/5

No solid public evidence was found for disciplined charitable obligation as a recurring practice.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication3/5

Her long-run artistic commitments appear durable, but the public record is not rich on interpersonal promise-keeping.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty4/5

She continued to work after the 1929 crash forced mortgages and art sales.

Patient during personal hardship3/5

The divorce and later material hardship did not end her work, though the record is not uniformly detailed.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Imprisonment and political pressure in 1932 did not stop her public output.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1922

Co-founds Grupo dos Cinco and commits to Brazilian modernism

After Modern Art Week reshaped Sao Paulo's art scene, Tarsila helped found Grupo dos Cinco and began building a distinctly Brazilian modernist language instead of simply importing Paris trends.

She became a central organizer and symbol of Brazilian modernism.

high
1923

Paints A Negra in Paris

In Paris, Tarsila painted A Negra, a pivotal synthesis of European modernist form and Brazilian subject matter that became one of the landmarks of Brazilian art.

The work became foundational to her career and to Brazilian modernism, while later drawing critical race-aware readings.

high
1928

Paints Abaporu and catalyzes Anthropophagy

Tarsila painted Abaporu as a gift for Oswald de Andrade, and the work directly inspired the Anthropophagic movement's call to digest outside influence into a Brazilian cultural language.

Her most famous work became a durable symbol of cultural self-definition.

high
1930

Endures financial collapse after the 1929 crash

After the New York crash, Tarsila's properties were mortgaged and she was forced to sell much of her important Paris collection, sharply reducing her material security and status.

She shifted to a more modest life and kept working despite major personal loss.

medium
1931

Travels to the Soviet Union and turns toward social themes

A Moscow exhibition and direct contact with Soviet worker politics pushed Tarsila toward a more socially committed phase centered on labor, inequality, and industrial life.

Her paintings moved from symbolic national mythmaking toward explicit social commentary.

high
1932

Is imprisoned for a month after returning from the USSR

During the Constitutionalist Revolution, Vargas-era authorities jailed Tarsila for a month because her recent Soviet trip marked her as a leftist sympathizer.

The prison episode did not end her artistic work and sharpened the pressure context around her social phase.

medium
1933

Paints Workers and Second Class

In her social phase, Tarsila made Workers and Second Class, foregrounding industrial laborers, racial diversity, hardship, and the costs of modernization in Sao Paulo.

These works remain the strongest public evidence that her concern for inequality became durable artistic action.

high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Financial collapse after the 1929 crash

1930

Mortgages and forced art sales sharply reduced her material security.

Response: She kept working, adapted to a more modest life, and did not disappear from public artistic life.

positive

Imprisonment after Soviet travel

1932

Authorities jailed her for a month as a leftist sympathizer during political unrest.

Response: The episode intensified rather than erased her socially engaged phase.

positive

Elite distance in later criticism

2019

Later museum interpretation argued that some images of Black and working-class subjects reflected exoticizing elite vision.

Response: This does not erase the social turn, but it keeps the record mixed and under review.

mixed

Progression

crisis years

The crash, divorce, Soviet travel, and prison pushed her toward a more socially explicit and pressure-tested phase.

stressed_but_productive

current stage

Her legacy remains artistically central, but modern institutional reading is more critical about race, class, and the limits of symbolic care.

stable_under_review

early years

Elite upbringing, academic training, and an early turn from conventional portrait study toward modernist experimentation.

forming

growth years

Paris study, the Group of Five, Pau-Brasil, and Abaporu made her a core builder of Brazilian modernism.

expanding

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Repeatedly translated Brazilian landscape, folklore, and labor into a distinct artistic language.
  • Stayed publicly productive after major personal and financial setbacks.

Concerns

  • Much of her social-care case is expressive and symbolic rather than direct service delivery.
  • Modern institutional readings stress that some racial and class portrayals remained marked by elite exotification.

Evidence Quality

8

Strong

3

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: strong_with_contested_interpretation

This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.