Pinky Wainer
Country:
Brazil
Company:
Art
She is the daughter of Samuel Wainer from Bessarabia. Her birth name was Debora Wainer. Since 1984, she has been showing his works, both in São Paulo and in Rio de Janeiro, in individual and group exhibitions. An artist of diversity, he designed the graphic design and editorial coordination of books such as Mata Atläntic, by Ana and Tom Jobim, for Editora Jobim Music and the book O lugar do Escritor, by Eder Chiodetto, for Cosac and Naify. She represented Brazil at the Unicef /Jack Ezra Keats International Children's Book Biennial in New York with the book Pipistrelo das Mil Cores by Zelia Gattai. She won the Adolfo Eizen Special Prize, awarded by the Brazilian Writers' Union, for her illustrations in the book Andira, by Rachel de Queiroz. She worked on the design and arrangement of the stage for the play Agatha by Marguerite Duras, directed by Roberto Lage, for which she was nominated for the
Shell Theater Award in the category of scenography. She has developed CD cases and covers for Biscoito Fino, Sony and Universal Music. Pinky lives in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, where she has the "Loja do Bispo", which has the most diverse works re- lated to art in general and hosts a visionary and avant-garde publishing house, with titles of the most thoughtful minds in the country. She is the author of "Vendo Alma Vagabunda" with Tattoos Del Che and "My Reason to Live", based on transcripts from her father, journalist Samuel Wainer, who ran the newspaper "Ultima hora".