At the Theatro Municipal steps, “Letters to a Young Fat Woman” redefines the body as a space of ritual, healing, and political beauty.
Categoria: Culture
After ten years, “Human Bodies – Wonders of the Human Body” returns to Fortaleza with a renewed collection and immersive gallery at Iguatemi Bosque.
Massive panels near Aterro do Flamengo display works by Toz, Cadu, Mülambo, Marcos Chaves and Paulo Bruscky in ArtRio’s new project.
28 Brazilian film premieres, filmmaker Q&As, and a key industry forum arrive at CineSesc from March 12–18, 2026.
Brazilian duo opens “Leva tempo, mas vai dar tempo” on March 7 at Casa Seva, featuring 20 new works and a live-built performative wax installation. Free admission.
Hidden for five years, Eliseu Visconti’s monumental stage curtain at Rio’s Municipal Theatre is back — a special guided tour on March 2 reveals its secrets.
“Five Choreographers on One Body” returns with Flávia Tápias and a new generation, challenging ageism and celebrating the mature body in contemporary dance.
On March 21, Brazil’s Museu do Futebol unveils an audio guide on Black protagonism in football — plus a special jersey collectors’ fair on the 7th.
From Rio’s funk to the Tikuna worldview: five dance works from five Brazilian states reveal the country’s choreographic diversity at MITbr 2026.
Dancer Antoni Androulakis brings the FLUXNESS workshop to Espaço Tápias on March 17–19 — a method blending body awareness, challenge, and playfulness.
Georgia Szpílman brings an intimate musical tribute to Brazil’s pioneering 19th-century composer to a new Rio venue this March.
Free ticket pickup for Joelma and Marisa Monte at Arena Floripa opens Mar 2 at 12 p.m., online only, limited to 1 ticket per CPF
After an emotional debut, Ivete Sangalo returns to Ibirapuera this Saturday (Feb 28) with the Tabernacle Choir, streaming live worldwide on YouTube.
Dudu Gehlen’s acclaimed monologue returns to Teatro Cândido Mendes in March for a farewell season featuring interpretation in Libras.
The exhibition “Joaquín Torres García – 150 Years” at CCBB São Paulo revisits the Uruguayan artist’s legacy through dialogues with 70 modern and contemporary creators.
While closed for new exhibitions, the Museu das Amazônias launches a free outdoor program with 100+ activities across Belém’s Porto Futuro complex.
From February 26 to March 2, Thiago Rosinhole presents an exhibition and meet-and-greet at Off The Wall Gallery in Houston.
The Iguatemi Kids Club is back at Shopping Iguatemi Bosque with free performances and Easter-themed events throughout March.
Free season in São Paulo brings “Jacinta”, a powerful play about the real story of a Black woman embalmed and displayed for 30 years at Brazil’s most traditional law school.
330 voices, city officials, and a mystery Brazilian music star: the Tabernacle Choir launched its Brazil tour with a landmark premiere at Sala São Paulo.
After moving audiences in 2025, the musical tribute to the maestro begins its new tour across eight Brazilian capitals, debuting in Fortaleza.
Starring Carol Castro, Bruno Fagundes, Gustavo Mendes and Angela Rebello, the hit comedy “The Morning After” now runs until March 8 at Teatro VillaLobos.
Gilberto Gil, Agnes Nunes, and Blick Bassy bring Brazilian afro-soul and art to Paris’s Théâtre du Châtelet for the Back2Black Festival.
Premiering March 7 at Teatro Ziembinski, “The Healing of the Earth – Small Revolutions” turns Eliane Potiguara’s stories into a poetic act of resistance.
In March, Grupo Caleidoscópio takes “The Fisherman and the Skeleton Woman” to blind audiences and public schools, combining silence, puppetry, and emotion.
Facing an imminent storm, the play “Temporal” by Giovanna Nader and Vino Fragoso questions how we experience — and waste — time today.
The São Paulo gallery joins ARCOmadrid 2026 with works by Hudinilson Jr. and Lia D Castro, exploring the body as a field of resistance.
On March 5, at Casa de Portugal, philosopher Lúcia Helena Galvão unravels the Hermetic Laws of “The Kybalion” and their role in everyday life.
At ARCOmadrid 2026, Almeida & Dale presents 25 artists exploring memory and time through works that merge geopolitics, body, and symbolism.
Casa Museu Ema Klabin releases the catalog of “When São Paulo Was Piratininga,” revealing 4,000 years of human presence before the city’s foundation.