Explanation:
Tarsila do Amaral was a Brazilian painter of the Brazilian modernist artistic movement. His most famous painting Aboporu, painted in oil paint in 1928, depicts a person sitting in an arid landscape portrayed by the sun and vegetation, with arms, hands and feet larger than the head. The artist wanted to portray the field worker, whose members of the body that allude to force were more for these workers than thinking, represented by the head for example. This work portrays the emergence of the movement within modernism, the anthropophagic movement, initiated by Tarsila.
Candido Portinari was also a Brazilian painter, whose most famous work is Guerra e Paz, painted between 1952 and 1956, is also part of the Brazilian modernist movement, but with elements of influence from cubism and surrealism. Portinari, like Tarsila, used new forms and meanings in her art, whose techniques were different but the message of her work sought to portray social movements, workers, fauna and flora, history, religion, etc.