Tag Archives: Brazil

Oscar Niemeyer: In Memoriam – NYTimes.com

6 Dec

Oscar Niemeyer: In MemoriamBy SHEILA GLASERAgencia Estado, via Associated Press ImagesOscar Niemeyer working on a project in São Paulo, Brazil, Apr. 6, 1969.Oscar Niemeyer, the renowned Brazilian architect, died yesterday at 104, but not before transforming Modernist rigors into something surprisingly sensual. When Michael Kimmelman profiled him for the magazine in 2005, Niemeyer was still going to his office in Rio and planning new buildings, including an auditorium for Brasília, the city whose creation fueled his critics but also ensured his fame. As Kimmelman wrote, Niemeyer “designed some of the most audacious, sublimely poetic and occasionally goofy buildings of the 20th century.”It was his museum in Niteroi, across the bay from Rio, that brought him renewed attention when it was completed in 1996 and thereafter became a backdrop in fashion magazines. As Kimmelman put it:Trendy publications like Wallpaper embraced his formal finesse, with its hint of radical chic. Brand-name architects made pilgrimages to Rio. At nearly a century old, Niemeyer became the darling of the smart set.And so he remained, continuing to plan and dream and to inspire.Simon Norfolk/NB Pictures for The New York TimesThe Times Magazine, May 15, 2005.

via Oscar Niemeyer: In Memoriam – NYTimes.com.

Today a incomparable genius has passed away just 10 days before he turned 105 years old. Until his last days before he was hospitalized, he was going to his office and working on what he loved. He loved life and lived it to the fullest. Today is a sad day.

To honor the master that he was, I would like to share my favorite quotes by him:

“Camus says in ‘The Stranger’ that reason is the enemy of imagination. Sometimes you have to put reason aside and make something beautiful.”

“i deliberately disregarded the right angle and rationalist architecture designed with ruler and square to boldly enter the world of curves and straight lines offered by reinforced concrete. […]This deliberate protest arose from the environment in which I lived, with its white beaches, its huge mountains, its old baroque churches, and the beautiful suntanned women.”

Oscar Niemeyer Museum designed by him, in Curitiba, Parana, Brazil

Oscar Niemeyer Museum designed by him, in Curitiba, Parana, Brazil

An Ode to the Jabuticaba

4 Nov

Jabuticaba is one of my favorite fruits, the crunchy sound it makes when you bite into it, and its sweet pulp are incomparable to any other fruit I tasted before.

Jabuticaba (Myrciaria cauliflora) is pronounced [ʒabutʃiˈkabɐ]. It is also called Brazilian Grape Tree, Jaboticaba, Jabotica, Guaperu, Guapuru, Hivapuru, Sabará and Ybapuru. The fruits stick out on the trunk and branches of the Jabuticabeira (jabuticaba tree), and belongs to the Myrtaceae family.

It is native to Brazil and its fruits flourish usually once a year.

The name jabuticaba, derives from the indigenous tribe Tupi word Jabuti – which means tortoise + Caba – which means place, due to the fruit’s resemblance to tortoises.

Jabuticaba is usually eaten raw, and it has a sweet pulp. Its seeds can be swallowed, but some people like to suck its pulp and remove the seeds. It is usually used to make jams, sauces, liquor and wine.

Jabuticaba has many nutritional properties such as iron, vitamin C, phosphorus, niacin, pectin and anthocyanin. It has also been used as astringent, in skins treatment for hemoptysis, asthma, diarrhea, and gargled for chronic inflammation of the tonsils and throat.

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Here is a picture of the Jabuticabeira – the Jabuticaba tree – that I found on Wikipedia, the photographer is Bruno.karklis

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