You could almost call it an art traffic jam, Brazilian-style. From the Portuguese, Salvador got splendid rococo churches with gold tabernacles, silver candlesticks, and wooden Christs covered with blood drops made from rubies. From Africa came the congo drums and a love for rhythm that springs from the fingers of a musician sitting in the shadow of a shop and plucking the string of a berimbau.
Hard to believe the Pelourinho, the old section of Salvador, once hosted the colonial spectacle of public floggings; the word "pelourinho" means whipping post. No more. Nowadays, the tourists have conquered it, and many of the Pelo's artistic wares bear a gentle reminder that us mortals must respect the recklessness of fate. To ward off the evil eye, one can purchase a figa, a good luck charm in the shape of a clenched hand with the thumb stuck between the pointer and middle finger. The brash carrancas — carved wood heads of jagged-teeth half-dragon-half-man that once protected boats against water demons — will guard homes or shops from marauding bad karma. But for the serious artist, inspiration emerges not from the tourist shops, but from frustration and chaos.
I arrived at the Pelourinho on Sunday night, and ran into the weekly Olodum concert. A flatbed truck, a loudspeaker and a few amazing drummers was all it took. The square exploded with the sound of Olodum drums and dancing bodies, couples making out, and little boys groping for wristwatches. Most of the restauranteurs seemed to have closed up shop and joined the party, but upon arriving in Salvador after a long bus ride from Ilhéus, I had to eat. My hunger led me to a narrow doorway, and into a small café decorated with reed rattan and woody-colored batiks. Reggae music pouring from a speaker in the corner of the room, drowned out the drums outside.
The kitchen was closed here too, but the proprietor offered to cook some rice, beans, and meat. Good deal. I sat down for a beer. Suddenly I realized I was surrounded by the watchful eyes of the orixás. The paintings that hung on the café walls, paid homage to this pantheon of gods from the African-Brazilian religion. African slaves, shackled together in the holds of Portuguese ships, brought the orixás with them to roam free in the new land. In spite of the colonizers attempts to crush these beliefs, the orixás and their veneration prevailed, and still clamor for the Brazilian soul.
In one of the paintings, "Dança do Sol" (Dance of the Sun), black figures celebrate so joyously that a white light radiates from their bodies. In another painting, Ogum the warrior raises his shield with a painted face of brown, blue and yellow slashes. From another canvas bursts Xangô, god of thunder, with fire leaping from his head. As I admired the paintings, a young man in dreadlocks and a dashiki tunic stepped into the restaurant followed by a cluster of small boys. The boys ran into the back room, playing, and the young man introduced himself as Jorge de Olinda, the orixá portrait painter.
Olinda joined me at my table. His face, with vibrant dark skin and high cheekbones, had that Brazilian openness, and his smile showed some-missing teeth. The frolicking kids ran back into the restaurant and one of them, his son, came over and sat on my lap. The food arrived including dinner for the small one. Olinda fed him spoonfuls of rice and beans while he talked about his art. I referred to his portrait that dominated the others, "Exu O Mensageiro" (Exu the Messenger). Exu, with his brilliant red lips and a red shirt, holds a bottle and a pitchfork while contemplating a salmon-colored sky. Isn't Exu equated with devil? I asked. Olinda turned sharply to the painting, his dreads brushing his shoulders, and passionately corrected me. Not quite, he said. In Africa, Exu was a messenger to the gods. A sacrifice made to a particular orixá was first made to Exu who in turn carried the prayers onward. In Brazil, Exu's qualities became more sinister once the slave trade came into the picture. The slaves used Exu's other attributes — his wiliness and love of witchcraft — to resist their white masters.
Later that night, after we finished talking about paintings and the difficulty of Brazilians getting travel visas, I left the cafe, much the way I leave so many artists, with admiration but not enough money to buy their art.
A week later, I met Olinda again in the Pelourinho, standing in front of the dazzling blue Igreja Nossa Senhora do Rosário dos Pretos, a church built by slaves for their people. His loose white clothes glowed under the streetlights and he held two large paintings. This time, he cast his eyes away from me, and looked over at people climbing the cobblestone hill up to the square.
It's too discouraging, he shrugged, to work for many years, yet still be poor. To be successful, an artist either must go to São Paulo or Rio, or settle for painting tourist souvenirs. Many people, even friends, he said, like his paintings, even offer to buy them, but never do. He glanced at me with a knowing nod, a light but important brush stroke.
Then he ambled over to the steps of the city museum and set his paintings down. The Pelourinho savored one of its quieter nights, and I could hear the groups of men sitting on the steps and talking in soft rolling voices, and the sizzle from the vendors toasting cheese slabs over coffee cans stoves. Olinda continued, I must be crazy to keep painting, but I need to paint what I want. I don't drink or smoke cannabis like my other friends, and I have to paint. But I have two kids, a wife. I sell my paintings for $350, because no one would buy them for $750.
He told me of the many unnoticed artists here. He motioned to a man with a fine set of dreads carrying a gold cardboard tube slung around his back. He came over, uncapped his gold tube and pulled out several canvases, letting loose a splash of mystical faces painted in greens and dark blue surrounded by flowers and gold ankhs.
Olinda then motioned to another man chatting to a group of friends. The man saw Olinda, nodded, slipped into a doorway, and re-emerged with a painting. His canvas depicted workers, two women and one man all with bulky strong arms. The artist, who seemed a bit older and more matter-of fact, said he is impressed with hands and arms as they are the means of working in Bahia. I found myself comparing his figures to the broad-shouldered peasants of Diego Rivera, and the soft earth colors to early works of Picasso. I am an academic, he admitted, so I have sold a few paintings. But he ruefully admitted that people recognized his style from somewhere else and he became popular by default. I thought, did I not compare his paintings as well? But then again, artists need to blend the colors of humility with pride to survive.
Olinda sat down bitterly between his two big paintings. It's no use, he said, artists are not respected in the world. He held his two paintings and showed them to the street. The street would approve of the paintings' honesty. One in particular, "Quem Matou João?" (Who Killed John), portrayed a merry Salvador cityscape with children playing among the ornate churches and red-tiled houses. But look closely. In the corner of the painting is a murder in progress. A group of figures surrounds the tiny tortured figure of João splattered in blood, and taking his last tumble in the air. It is said that all paintings are self-portraits, and this one is no exception.