About this product
Sunglasses tilted, grinning, one finger tapping his temple — the posture of a man who just wrote the most disruptive cultural document in Brazilian history and knows it. The halftone portrait of Oswald de Andrade sits center-chest on a black tee, rendered in deep sand and sepia, heavily grained, the kind of texture that belongs on a broadsheet from 1928.
"ANDRADE" spans the full width above him in wide, cracked block letters — weathered enough to feel like they were stamped once and left to age.
Below: "SAO PAULO, BRAZIL – FEBRUARY 1928 / CANNIBAL POETRY TOUR" in stacked serif caps. February 1928 is when the Manifesto Antropófago hit — Andrade's argument that Brazilian culture should devour European influence whole and transform it into something unrecognizable, irreducible, its own. The tour name isn't a metaphor. It's the thesis. Poetas Y Punks mark at the neckline. 4.2 oz Airlume combed ring-spun cotton, retail fit.