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Diego Rivera Mexican Artist 1886- 1957 Mrs. Naft, Reading Specialist, anaft@bcps.org. Diego Rivera. Diego Rivera was born in Mexico on December 8, 1886. As a child he was a good student and a talented artist.
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Diego RiveraMexican Artist1886- 1957Mrs. Naft, Reading Specialist, anaft@bcps.org
Diego Rivera was born in Mexico on December 8, 1886. As a child he was a good student and a talented artist.
By the time he was twelve years old, he was a full time art student. At twenty Diego Rivera was well known as a painter.
After finishing school, the Mexican government sent Diego to Spain to study art. He returned to Mexico for one year at the start of the Mexican Revolution when the poor workers and farmers were demanding the government return the land to the poor.
The next year he returned to Europe for many years, but moved back to Mexico after the Revolution. Diego taught that art should be on big walls where everyone can see it. These types of paintings are called murals.
Diego represented the ideas of the Mexican Revolution by painting murals of indigenous (native) people and their history. What point of view did he have about them in the next pictures?
Diego wanted his murals to give workers and Mexicans pride in their jobs, culture, history, and optimism about their future.
Workers building machines for Mexico’s growing industry in the 1900’s.
Mural of Mexican History in the Palace of Cortes The mural is in a large hall and covers three of its walls. The pictures blend into one another to show the events in chronological order (beginning, middle, and end). It begins on one side with the arrival of the Spanish in 1521 and ends on the other side with the Mexican Revolution in 1910.
We will interpret pictures from the mural in the Palace of Cortes in order to identify Diego Rivera’s point of view about these events.
The Spanish conquest of the natives of the land that later became Mexico.
This is a drawing of the center of Tenochtitlan before the arrival of the Spanish. It was made by a Spanish artist and is based on descriptions of the Spanish conquerors and the surviving ruins of the Aztec pyramids.
Cortes led the war against the natives.
An Aztec warrior knight dressed for battle in jaguar skins, a shield, and a war club made of black obsidian (a volcanic stone that is like glass). A Spanish knight and horse dressed in full metal armor.
The conquest of the indigenous natives by the Spanish in 1521.
The Spanish priests and soldiers leadthe native Mexicans in their first Christian religious service.
The indigenous native Mexicans build the Palace of Cortes under the supervision of the Spanish rulers.
The indigenous Mexicans work in the sugar cane industry under the supervision of the land owners.
The priests oversee the building of the cathedral by the indigenous workers.
Emiliano Zapata leads the Mexican people in a revolution against the Mexican government.
Not all of Diego Rivera’s murals tell events in chronological order. The next one is in the Presidential Palace in Mexico City and shows the history in one big picture.
5- Laws of reform 4- War for freedom against Spain 6- Mexican Revolution 1-the founding of the Aztec capital 3- Colonial period when Spain ruled the country 2- Spanish conquest Another way to show events.