EditorialInside Templo-Bar de Fé, exuberantly decorated with images and statues of figures from many religions, from Christianity to Hinduism to Afro-Brazilian umbanda, patrons listen to Samba music, in S?o Paulo, Nov. 10, 2022. (Victor Moriyama/The New York Times)
EditorialInside Templo-Bar de Fé, exuberantly decorated with images and statues of figures from many religions, from Christianity to Hinduism to Afro-Brazilian umbanda, patrons listen to Samba music, in S?o Paulo, Nov. 10, 2022. (Victor Moriyama/The New York Times)
EditorialPluriarc, African American (Brazil - Afro-Brazilian?), late 19th century, Brazil, African American (Brazil - Afro-Brazilian?), L. 31-1/2 in., Diam. of body 4 in., Depth 4 in., Chordophone-Musical Bow.
EditorialNyandra Fernandes, a dancer in Tambores de Olokun, holds a wooden doll known as a "calunga," in Rio de Janeiro, February 2020. (Maria Magdalena Arrellaga/The New York Times)