Ana De Gonta Colaço
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Ana de Gonta Colaço (19031954) was a Portuguese sculptor, artist and feminist.


Early life

Ana Raymunda de Gonta Colaço was born on 7 November 1903 in the Portuguese capital of
Lisbon Lisbon (; pt, Lisboa ) is the capital and largest city of Portugal, with an estimated population of 544,851 within its administrative limits in an area of 100.05 km2. Grande Lisboa, Lisbon's urban area extends beyond the city's administr ...
. She was the daughter of the poet
Branca de Gonta Colaço Branca Eva de Gonta Syder Ribeiro Colaço (July 8, 1880 — March 22, 1945), better known as Branca de Gonta Colaço, was a Portuguese writer, scholar and linguist. She was the daughter of British Charlotte Ann Syder and Portuguese politician and ...
and the artist
Jorge Colaço Jorge Colaço (26 February 1868 - 23 August 1942) was a Portuguese painter specially known for his works as tile (''azulejo'') painter. Jorge Colaço was born in Tangier, Morocco, the son of a Portuguese diplomat. He studied art in Lisbon, Madrid ...
. She was known as Aninhas, and was then the couple's third daughter, being born just a year after the still birth of a sister. Her family was well-connected to the intellectual activity of the time in Portugal, and her parents were prominent figures in Portuguese society. Ana was the younger sister of the lawyer, writer and playwright Tomás Ribeiro Colaço. On her father's side she was a cousin of the pianist and composer Alexandre Rey Colaço, of the actress and stage director Amélia Rey Colaço and of the painter and illustrator
Alice Rey Colaço Alice Schmidt Constant Lafourcade Rey Colaço (Lisbon, 11 July 1890 — Lisbon, 13 June 1978) was a Portuguese painter, modernist illustrator, lyric singer, set designer and costume designer. Biography Alice Rey Colaço belonged to a culture ...
, as well as granddaughter on the maternal side of the politician and writer
Tomás Ribeiro Tomás Ribeiro may refer to: * Tomás Ribeiro (writer) * Tomás Ribeiro (footballer) {{hndis, Ribeiro, Tomas ...
. Colaço's childhood was very privileged. She was taught at home by tutors specialised in a variety of disciplines, including languages, literature, music and even horse riding. She competed, together with her younger sister, Maria Christina, in national equestrian tournaments. Her childhood was also marked by the constant presence of prominent figures from high society as well as the artistic and cultural world. Her mother organized
soirées A party is a gathering of people who have been invited by a host for the purposes of socializing, conversation, recreation, or as part of a festival or other commemoration or celebration of a special occasion. A party will often feature ...
and dinners at her home and Queen D. Amélia was a regular visitor. At the age of 17, Colaço began to develop her talent for sculpture, after having experimented and created small works at home, being encouraged by her father who gave her clay obtained from the Sacavém ceramics factory. Since sculpture rarely provided financial independence or was considered a good occupation for a woman, it was thanks to the support of her parents that she started taking classes.


Feminism

During the same period, Colaço began to embrace some of the ideas of feminism, starting to wear short hair, to dress in men's suits and ties and to write poems and other texts about the condition of women in Portugal. This led to speculation about her sexual orientation. That she was a lesbian was known to her family, who tried to protect her from public scrutiny in the very conservative Portugal of the time. She would later join the feminist ''
Conselho Nacional das Mulheres Portuguesas The ''Conselho Nacional das Mulheres Portuguesas'' (National Council of Portuguese Women) was a feminist organization founded in 1914. Early developments The first attempt to found a Women’s Council in Portugal was at the beginning of the 20th ...
'' (National Council of Portuguese Women), together with her mother.


First exhibitions

In April 1923, Colaço exhibited her first work at the exhibition of the National Society of Fine Arts, in Lisbon. She received an honourable mention for a small statue in plaster called ''Onda'' (Wave), which illustrated a female nude lying on the foam of a wave. Reviews were mixed, with some praising the work while others criticised the artist. In 1924, she held her first solo exhibition at ''Salão Bobone'', in Lisbon, and despite the harsh criticism she received in several newspaper articles, including one that said that "Sculpture can never be the art of a woman", the inauguration of the exhibition was attended by many personalities from the world of arts, culture, politics and Portuguese feminist activism, such as the painters
Eduarda Lapa Eduarda Lapa (1895 — 1976) was a painter and painting teacher who specialized in naturalist painting, especially still life, becoming known as the "flower painter" and the "ambassador of colours". An active feminist, she was the first woman to j ...
and
Mily Possoz Mily Possoz, sometimes written as Milly (18881968), was a Portuguese artist of Belgian origin. She was one of the most prominent figures of the first generation of Portuguese modernist artists. Early life Émilia Possoz was born on 4 December 18 ...
and the sculptor
António Teixeira Lopes António Teixeira Lopes (27 October 1866–21 June 1942) was a Portuguese sculptor. Life Teixeira Lopes was the son of sculptor José Joaquim Teixeira Lopes and started learning his art in his father's workshop. In 1882 he entered the Academ ...
.


Training in Paris

In 1927, she graduated from the School of Cinematographic Art in Lisbon. Having developed an artistic talent, she left Lisbon for Paris in 1929, travelling via the Prado Museum in Madrid. In Paris, she joined the
Julian Academy Julian may refer to: People * Julian (emperor) (331–363), Roman emperor from 361 to 363 * Julian (Rome), referring to the Roman gens Julia, with imperial dynasty offshoots * Saint Julian (disambiguation), several Christian saints * Julian (give ...
, becoming a pupil of Paul Landowski and
Alfred-Alphonse Bottiau Alfred-Alphonse Bottiau (6 February 1889 – 25 February 1951) was a French sculptor. He was born in Valenciennes and after early studies in his home town he studied in Paris under Jean Antoine Injalbert and was runner-up for the Prix de Rome f ...
. After seven months, she was admitted to exhibit at the ''Salon d'Automne'' (Autumn Salon), with a work called ''Pele Vermelha'' (Red Skin), which represented a departure from the naturalist style she had followed in Portugal and a movement towards modernism. Recalling her childhood nickname, her works were all signed "Aninhas". During the 1930s she moved between Paris, London, Lisbon and Tangier.


Later activities

During one of her stays in Portugal, in 1930, she was invited to exhibit at an Exhibition of Ancient and Modern Feminine Work, organized by the ''Conselho Nacional das Mulheres Portuguesas''. In 1932, she started the Salão dos Artistas Criadores (Salon of Creative Artists), together with the painter
Maria Adelaide Lima Cruz Maria Adelaide Lima Cruz was a Portuguese painter, illustrator, set designer and costume designer. Early life Maria Adelaide de Lima Cruz (19081985) was born into a family of painters and musicians, being the daughter of the painter and piano te ...
and the sculptor
Maria José Dias da Câmara Maria may refer to: People * Mary, mother of Jesus * Maria (given name), a popular given name in many languages Place names Extraterrestrial *170 Maria, a Main belt S-type asteroid discovered in 1877 * Lunar maria (plural of ''mare''), large, ...
, with whom she at the time maintained a relationship and shared a studio in Lisbon. In 1939, she faced some controversy, having made public her relationship with the singer and actress
Corina Freire Corina Freire (1897 – ), was a Portuguese singer, actress and impresario. Early life Corina Carlos Freire was born on 14 December 1897 in Silves in the Algarve region of Portugal. She was the illegitimate daughter of João José Freire, a pha ...
. One of her works, ''Ouvindo o Sermão'' (Listening to the Sermon), was refused by the jury of the National Society of Fine Arts. Interviewed about the exhibition, she claimed that "modernism does not exist in Portugal. Nobody knows what it is". Nevertheless, she was invited to exhibit at the
Portuguese World Exhibition The Portuguese World Exhibition ( pt, Exposição do Mundo Português) was held in Lisbon in 1940 to mark 800 years since the foundation of the country and 300 years since the restoration of independence from Spain. The fair ran from 23 June to 2 ...
in Lisbon in 1940, where she exhibited a bas-relief based on a literary character of her grandfather.


Death

After her mother's death in 1945, Colaço began to show signs of poor health, choosing to settle in the family home, where she continued to produce works of art and wrote texts on the condition of women in Portuguese society. Her last work, a monumental sculpture of the Assumption of Mary, was commissioned by the parish of
Aguiar da Beira Aguiar da Beira () is a municipality in Guarda District in Portugal. The population in 2011 was 5,473, in an area of . The present Mayor is Virgílio da Cunha, elected by an independent group of citizens. The municipal holiday is February 10. Hi ...
in the north of Portugal. She died on 25 December 1954, at the home of her younger sister. She was buried in the Prazeres Cemetery in Lisbon. Despite her relatively small output, she continues to be exhibited.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Colaço, Ana de Gonta 1903 births 1954 deaths Portuguese women sculptors Portuguese feminists Portuguese lesbian artists Portuguese LGBT sculptors Lesbian sculptors 20th-century Portuguese LGBT people