Celebrating the Mexican people’s potential to craft the nation’s history was a key theme in Mexican muralism.
c. 1920 - 1960
Celebrating the Mexican people’s potential to craft the nation’s history was a key theme in Mexican muralism.
c. 1920 - 1960
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For Rivera, the third floor murals of the SEP served as a tool to promote postrevolutionary Mexico and international socialism.
Artists in Mexico believed that art had a unique role to play in restructuring their society after ten years of civil war.
Diego Rivera's enormous mural cycle at the Ministry of Public Education celebrates Mexico: its festivals, its industries, and its people in over 100 panels
A brutal history told for a modern American city, Mexican muralism in New York
Rivera celebrates Indigenous culture, but also points to poverty in this melancholy painting of a flower seller.
Why was the original version of this mural at New York’s Rockefeller Center destroyed within months of its creation?
Rivera includes 400 years of history here, and guarantees that the stories normally edited out are included.
Why was the original version of this mural at New York’s Rockefeller Center destroyed within months of its creation?
Rivera’s controversial murals were made at the height of Depression-era instability in auto-manufacturing Detroit.
Epic murals in highly visible, public buildings were commissioned by the Mexican government to teach history.