Bangkok Post

Female artists in Rio promote women’s rights with their painting

- YESICA FISCH

Before leaving her home each day to teach art to children, Mariluce Maria de Souza must factor in extra time to account for the shootings and other eruptions of violence that occur daily in Alemao, Rio de Janeiro’s largest complex of slums, or favelas.

The 35-year-old mother of one boy sometimes has to cancel a session teaching painting to children because the journey to class is just too dangerous. Through the project called Favela Art, the self-taught artist requires that her students attend school and study hard in return.

Souza has become an example of empowermen­t for girls and women in the slum, who often face domestic violence and workplace discrimina­tion.

“Sometimes the mothers, who are mother and father at the same time, don’t have the time to give the kind of attention that five, six or seven children need,’’ Souza said.

Like many Latin American countries, Brazil has deep problems with gender-specific violence. The Brazilian non-profit Mapa da Violencia says nearly five in 100,000 women are killed each year, giving the country one of the world’s highest homicide rates for women. The situation is even worse for black women, many of whom live in slums. Between 2003 and 2013, the annual number of homicides of black women jumped 54%, according to Mapa da Violencia.

“We use the graffiti to demand the end of violence against women,’’ said Maiara Viana Rodrigues, a 25-year-old who said that as a teen she was sexually abused by a man in her neighbourh­ood.

To make her point, a member of Afro graff it te ira s—a group working to empower black women — on one recent afternoon painted graffiti exhorting: “Viva! You, Woman!’’ on a wall in a Rio suburb.

Along with rejecting physical violence, the female artists say they want to shine a light on psychologi­cal abuse, unequal access to education and health care and less pay for women doing the same job as men.

Lya Alves, who recently painted a mural of a black woman on a wall in Rio’s recently renovated port area, says feminism has lost much of its meaning since the 1970s, when women were fighting against being considered sexual objects.

“Nowadays the media promotes’’ the sexual objectific­ation of women, she said. “Is that helping to obtain a better education, a better salary?”

 ??  ?? Mariluce Maria de Souza poses in front of one of her murals at the Alemao slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Mariluce Maria de Souza poses in front of one of her murals at the Alemao slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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