"Chêro, chêroso!": imagens do vestir em "Vendedora de cheiro" (1947) de Antonieta Feio
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Universidade Federal de Goiás
Resumo
The research investigates, based on the visual construction of the character
Vendedora de Cheiro (1947), by Antonieta Feio, focusing on the analysis of clothing
and body adornments as markers of cultural and social identity of popular women in
Belém. The thesis, which is transdisciplinary in nature, articulates art history, visual
culture, material culture (accessories) and fashion studies from a decolonial
perspective, drawing on a corpus composed of pictorial works, photographs,
travellers' narratives and literary texts produced between the 19th century and the
first half of the 20th century. The analysis of the figure represented, in dialogue with
documentary records and observations of contemporary erveiras, highlights the
permanence and re-signification of afro-indigenous aesthetic practices, revealing an
Amazonian feminine ethos that resists historical invisibility. In this way, the visuality
constructed around the Vendedora de Cheiro not only records a specific social and
economic practice, but also expresses ways of existing, resisting, and belonging for
women from Pará. Their way of dressing and adorning themselves is not only
functional or decorative, but acts as a symbolic language that communicates
ancestral knowledge and ties to the land. Clothing thus becomes a field of identity
affirmation, where working with herbs and scents is intertwined with the living
memory of other women who, over time, have built their own ways of occupying
urban spaces. By treating the character as a historical subject, the thesis contributes
to constructing a history of art based on peripheral female figures, confronting
eurocentric paradigms and revealing how the artist negotiates representations of the
Amazon by re-inscribing black women with afro-indigenous features as protagonists
of their own visuality.