Together, paints a portrait: an artist or thinker who sheds pretension to reveal something essential.

In the vast, ever-expanding universe of contemporary Brazilian creativity, a new name is beginning to surface with quiet insistence: .

Early traces of her work, circulating on independent zines and social media, point toward a multidisciplinary approach. Visual poetry, lo-fi photography, and spoken word fragments blend into a confessional yet universal aesthetic. Themes of memory, body politics, and the quiet violence of urban life recur in her verses. “I write to unlearn,” one fragment reads. “The skin is the first country.”

Though not yet a household name on major streaming platforms or gallery walls, the confluence of these three words carries weight. “Bia” — a common, warm nickname for Beatriz — suggests intimacy and approachability. “Arantes” is a surname that resonates deeply in Brazilian culture, most famously borne by the legendary Pelé (Edson Arantes do Nascimento), but also shared by countless poets, teachers, and everyday dreamers. “Nua” — Portuguese for “naked” or “bare” — adds a layer of raw vulnerability.