Installation view of Beatriz Milhazes: Rigor and Beauty at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

Installation view, Beatriz Milhazes: Rigor and Beauty, March 7, 2025 – September 7, 2025, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York

Museum Exhibitions

Beatriz Milhazes

Rigor and Beauty

Mar 7 – Sep 7, 2025
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
New York

This exhibition presents the work of global contemporary artist Beatriz Milhazes, who engages with her Brazilian cultural heritage and identity through the language of abstraction. The artist’s complex body of work spans four decades—from the 1980s to the present—and encompasses sculpture, collage, print, textiles, public art, and especially painting.

This focused exhibition features a group of fifteen paintings and works on paper from 1995 to 2023, drawn from the museum’s permanent collection and augmented by key loans, which together contextualize the broader narrative of Milhazes’s artistic evolution.

Milhazes’s work is deeply rooted in Brazilian history and tradition, drawing from colonial art and architecture, decorative arts, and the vibrant celebration of Carnival—a week-long festival in Rio de Janeiro that showcases Brazilian culture through parades, music, performances, and elaborate costumes. She is also influenced by Tropicália, a 1960s cultural movement that blended art, music, and literature to celebrate Brazilian identity while protesting the repressive military regime. The rhythms and colors of bossa nova, a musical style born in Rio de Janeiro in the late 1950s, also echo throughout her work. Beyond these influences, Milhazes engages with the work of artists like Henri Matisse and Piet Mondrian, while also referencing Tarsila do Amaral, whose creations were fundamental to the visual and aesthetic development of Brazilian Modernism.

In 1989 Milhazes developed an innovative technique she calls “monotransfer,” inspired by the monotype printing process, in which a painted image is transferred from a plate to paper, producing a mirror image. She begins her process by painting motifs onto clear plastic sheets with acrylic paint. Once the acrylic dries, she layers and adheres the painted films to canvas and then peels away the plastic, revealing the forms in reverse. The resulting compositions are vibrant and dynamic, combining abstract forms, organic patterns, and geometric structures on textured surfaces imbued with the memory of the artist’s actions.

The early paintings in this exhibition, primarily from the museum’s collection—such as Santa Cruz (1995), In albis (1995–96), and As quatro estaçōes (The Four Seasons, 1997)—draw inspiration from the opulence of 18th-century Brazilian Baroque colonial churches and ornamental garments. Milhazes synthesizes these influences into abstract and representative motifs, with circles and arabesques, delicate crochet and lace, flowers and floral patterns, and ornate pearls and ironwork emerging throughout her compositions. By 2000, she began exploring optical effects in her paintings, using linear repetitions to create undulating patterns and visual rhythms, as seen in Paisagem carioca (Carioca Landscape, 2000), O cravo e a rosa (The Carnation and the Rose, 2000), and O Caipira (The Caipira, 2004).

The works on paper in this exhibition, created between 2013 and 2021, demonstrate Milhazes’s continued experimentation with collage. She combines mass-produced elements like branded shopping bags, chocolate bar wrappers, and patterned paper with cutouts from her own solid-colored screenprints to create intricate patterns and bold abstract configurations.

Milhazes’s recent paintings, including Mistura sagrada (Sacred Mixture, 2022), mark a shift toward exploring the spiritual power of nature in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although references to the natural world have been present since her early career, here she delves into cycles of renewal—life and death—through colorful, angular forms and intricate patterns. Organic elements, reflective of the artist’s proximity to Rio de Janeiro’s Botanical Garden, Tijuca Forest, and Copacabana Beach, are echoed in the harmonious geometries, conceptual systems, and chromatic universes that span her oeuvre.

The exhibition is organized by Geaninne Gutiérrez-Guimarães, Curator, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation, New York.

Beatriz Milhazes: Rigor and Beauty is the second installment in the exhibition series Collection in Focus, which highlights the museum’s permanent collection. The series is part of a reinvigorated effort to make the Guggenheim New York’s world-renowned holdings more accessible to the public.

The Golden Egg by Beatriz Milhazes

Beatriz Milhazes, The Golden Egg, 2023, acrylic on linen,9' 2-1/4" × 9' 10-1/8" (280 cm x 300 cm) © Beatriz Milhazes

Visionary support for Collection in Focus is provided by Aleksandra Janke and Andrew McCormack.

The Leadership Committee for Beatriz Milhazes: Rigor and Beauty is gratefully acknowledged for its generosity, with special thanks to Laura Clifford, Peter Bentley Brandt, Christina and Alan MacDonald, Cristina Chacón and Diego Uribe, Alberto Cruz, Ilva Lorduy, Karina Mirochnik and Gaby Szpigiel, Pace Gallery, White Cube, Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel, and Galerie Max Hetzler.

Additional funding is provided by the Guggenheim New York’s Latin American Circle.

Learn more at (opens in a new window) guggenheim.org.
  • Museum Exhibitions — Beatriz Milhazes at the Guggenheim, Mar 7, 2025