Born in Rio de Janeiro in 1898, Heitor had already achieved some acclaim nationally and internationally by the 1940s. He was the only Black artist featured in a Brazilian war relief exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts in London in 1944. A much-repeated story goes that his depiction of a midsummer festival, Festa de São João, inspired the then Princess Elizabeth of England to ask, “Who is this extraordinary painter?”
Another breakthrough came in 1951, when Heitor’s painting of workers on a sugar plantation, Moenda, came in third place in the first São Paulo Biennial. He was honored with a special room in the second edition in 1953, and in between was included in the 26th Venice Biennale.
Heitor worked up until his death in October 1966 from pancreatic cancer, even making art and music from his hospital bed in Rio de Janeiro. Just a few months earlier he had participated in the seminal first edition of the World Festival of Black Arts in Dakar, Senegal.
Yet despite his success, it is only in recent years that scholars and curators have reappraised the longtime labeling of Heitor’s painting as “naive,” which diminished his importance in the history of Brazilian modern art. A major retrospective was held last year at the Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil in Rio de Janeiro, reframing his multiple contributions to visual art, music, design, and fashion through more than 200 works.
One of the paintings from that exhibition will also appear at Independent 20th Century. A dynamic samba scene from around 1963, it hints at Heitor’s legacy as a founding member of three of the oldest samba schools in Rio de Janeiro: Deixa Falar, Mangueira, and Portela, established in the 1920s.