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The Mexican Mural Movement Los Tres Grandes : Diego Rivera (1886-1957) José Clemente Orozco (1883-1949) David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974). Mexican Revolution 1910-1920. Jose Vasconcelos Minister of Education. Soldiers of the Revolution. Emiliano Zapata (1887-1919).
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The Mexican Mural Movement Los Tres Grandes: Diego Rivera (1886-1957) José Clemente Orozco (1883-1949) David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974)
Mexican Revolution 1910-1920 Jose Vasconcelos Minister of Education Soldiers of the Revolution Emiliano Zapata (1887-1919) Pancho Villa (1877-1923)
(left) Diego Rivera (Mexican 1886-1957) The Architect, o/c, 1914(right) Pablo Picasso, Three Musicians, o/c, 1921Analytic Cubism
Diego Rivera, Creation, 1922 - 23, encaustic and gold leaf, Amphitheater Bolivar, National Preparatory School, Mexico City
Diego Rivera, Creation, 1922 - 23, encaustic and gold leaf, Amphitheater Bolivar, National Preparatory School, Mexico City
Rivera, Creation, 1922-23 (right) early Renaissance Allegory of Good Government, fresco detail, Sienna, 1338, by Ambrigio Lorenzetti. Rivera had traveled to Italy in 1920 to study Italian Renaissance art
“Only why do the artists of this continent think that they should always assimilate the art of Europe? They should go to the other Americans for their enrichment, because if they copy Europe it will always be something they cannot feel because after all they are not Europeans.” - Diego RiveraPan-American Unity mural for San Francisco City College, 1940
Diagram of stone ball court relief from Chichen ItzaAt the invitation of Vasconcelos, Rivera traveled to Yucatán in 1921 to view the Maya pre-Conquest sites of Chichén Itza and Uxmal.
Maya Murals at Bonampak' (on border of Chiapas, Mexico, and Guatemala). This scene records the ascension of a new king in 790 AD, his reception by Mayan lords. Photos are from the complete replica at the National Museum of Anthropology and History in Mexico City
In 1927 Rivera traveled to the Soviet Union as a delegate from the Mexican Communist Party (joined in 1922) to attend the tenth anniversary of the Russian Revolution. Watercolor sketches for a mural in the Red Army Club, Moscow, which he never painted. Rivera’s communist views, like those of Orozco and Siqueiros, were independent of party doctrines.
Rivera at the Education Ministry, Mexico City, with one of his murals, 1924. Project began in 1922 and finished in 1928
Rivera, (left) with Frida Kahlo, 1930, (right) In The Arsenal, 1928, fresco, detail, Mexico City Ministry of Education. Frida Kahlo, center, distributes arms. In the right hand side Tina Modotti holds an ammunition belt. Text on the red banner is from a corrido, a song of the agrarian revolution.
Compare (left) Rivera, In The Arsenal, fresco detail, 1928 Giotto, Mourning of Christ, c. 1305, fresco detail, Cappella dell'Arena, Padua
"Giotto was a propagandist of the spirit of Christianity, the weapon of the Franciscan monks of his time against feudal oppression, Bruegel [Flemish Northern Renaissance Painter, C.1525-1569] was a propagandist of the struggle of the Dutch artisan petty bourgeoisie against feudal oppression. Every artist who has been worth anything has been a propagandist. . . I want to be a propagandist of Communism and I want to be it in all that I can think, in all that I can speak, in all that I can write, and in all that I can paint. I want to use my art as a weapon. . ." The Revolutionary Spirit in Modern Art, Diego Rivera, 1932
Rivera, Wall Street Banquet, 1928, fresco, 2nd floor, Ministry of Education, MC
Diego Rivera. Death of the Capitalist. 1928. Fresco. South wall, Courtyard of the Fiestas, Ministry of Education, Mexico City, Mexico. “These works that call themselves revolutionary, and that in the cases of Rivera and Siqueiros expound a simple and Manichean [dualistic] Marxism, were commissioned, sponsored and paid for by a government that was never Marxist and ceased being revolutionary…this painting helped to give it a progressive and revolutionary face.” - Octovio Paz
Leon Trotsky, Diego Rivera, and French Surrealist writer, André Breton, in Coyoacán in 1938
Diego Rivera.The History of Mexico - The Ancient Indian World. 1929-35. Fresco. North wall, National Palace, Mexico City, Mexico. The topic of this mural is the history of Mexico from the fall of Teotihuacan, about 900 BCE to the beginning of the presidency of Lázaro Cárdenas in 1935.
Diego Rivera, The History of Mexico. 1929-35. Fresco. West wall, detail of central arch, National Palace, Mexico City, Mexico
Diego Rivera. The History of Mexico. 1929-35. Fresco. West wall, left inner arch, National Palace, Mexico City, Mexico
Rivera, The History of Cuernavaca and Morelos,1929-30. Fresco. Cortez Palace, Cuernavaca, Mexico
Cortez Palace, Cuernavaca, Mexico. The Palace dates back from the colonial era, built in 1533, it served as the summer residence of Hernan Cortes
Rivera, The History of Cuernavaca and Morelos - The Enslavement of the Indian and Constructing the Cortez Palace. Detail. 1929-30. Fresco. Cortez Palace, Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Diego Rivera, The History of Cuernavaca and Morelos - The Enslavement of the Indian and Constructing the Cortez Palace. (detail) 1929-30. Fresco. Cortez Palace, Cuernavaca, Mexico
Rivera, The History of Cuernavaca and Morelos: Crossing the Barranca (ravine)1929-30, fresco detail, Cortez Palace, Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Views of the Garden Court of the Detroit Institute of Art with Diego Rivera’s mural, Detroit Industry, and new water fountain, right.
North wall, Detroit Industry, fresco, 1932, gift of Edsel Ford
Detroit Industry, detail of North Wall showing laborers of all races working in unison for the good of industry.
"The yellow race represents the sand, because it is most numerous. And the red race, the first in this country, is like the iron ore, the first thing necessary for the steel. The black race is like coal, because it has a great native esthetic sense, a real flame of feeling and beauty in its ancient sculpture, its native rhythm and music. So its esthetic sense is like the fire, and its labor furnished the hardness which the carbon in the coal gives to steel. "The white race is like the lime, not only because it is white, but because lime is the organizing agent in the making of steel. It binds together the other elements and so you see the white race as the great organizer of the world." - Rivera Detroit murals south wall with figures representing the white race (top left) and Asian race (“like sand,” right).
Rivera’s enthusiasm for industry and machines as gods of the modern world is evident in allusions to Aztec goddess, Coatlique
Julie Mehretu (Ethiopian, US-based painter, b. 1970) in front of Detroit Industry, November, 2007. Mehretu is a 2005 recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship (“Genius” award)
Julie Mehretu, Black City, ink and acrylic on canvas, 10X16ftDetroit Art Institute, 2007. http://graphics8.nytimes.com/audiosrc/arts/black-city.mp3
Rivera, Diego, A Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park, 1947-48Fresco, Alameda Hotel, Mexico City. Now located in the Diego Rivera Museum
Diego Rivera,Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park, 1948, fresco, Museo Mural Diego Rivera, Mexico City, Mexico Current installation
Diego Rivera, Man, Controller of the Universe (detail) 1934, fresco, Museo del Palacio de Belas Artes, Mexico City. Recreation of destroyed Rockefeller Center Mural, NYC* Read Rafael Herrarias, “Diego Rivera’s Mural in the Palace of Fine Arts” (Frank)
Diego Rivera, Man, Controller of the Universe (detail with Lenin), 1933, fresco
Rivera, The Making of a Fresco Showing the Building of a City, 1931, fresco, San Francisco Art Institute
Diego Rivera. Allegory of California, 1930-31. Fresco. Mural on wall and ceiling of main staircase between tenth and eleventh floors. Exchange's Luncheon Club/City Club, Pacific Stock Exchange Tower, San Francisco
http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/arts/20071104_AUCTIONS_FEATURE/index.htmlFall art auctions, 2007. This 1890 Vincent van Gogh landscape is expected to sell for $28 to $35 million
Rivera, Pan-American Unity, 1940, fresco, City College of San Francisco, 5 panels
Rivera, Detail of Pan-American Unity, 1940, San Francisco City College