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Crossing Borders: Mexican Modernist Prints

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The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) explores an unprecedented period  of cultural and intellectual exchange between Mexico and the U.S.in Crossing Borders: Mexican Modernist Prints, on view November  19, 2017 through March 11, 2018. 

The exhibition features  30 prints and drawings created in the 1930s and 1940s by artists such as Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and Elizabeth Catlett.   

Among the works in Crossing Borders that address social issues is  

http://www2.oberlin.edu/amam/images/1977.93_000.jpg

Diego Rivera.  Zapata . 1932 . The Baltimore Museum of Art: Gift of Blanche Adler. BMA 1932.28 . 5 . © 2017  Diego  Rivera /Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/SOMAAP, Mexico  
Zapata (1932),  Rivera’s lithograph of Mexican Revolution hero and agrarian leader Emiliano Zapata.  One of  the earliest Mexican modernist prints to enter the  BMA’s collection, it shows Zapata and his horse standing over the dead body of a wealthy landowner asfarmers  crowd in behind them. 

http://www.moma.org/media/W1siZiIsIjQxOTcyMiJdLFsicCIsImNvbnZlcnQiLCItcmVzaXplIDIwMDB4MjAwMFx1MDAzZSJdXQ.jpg?sha=ee2b8f2e8b667b8d

Other examples includeOrozco’s The Lynching (1934), a wrenching condemnation of racial violence from the portfolio The American Scene, No.1 that depicts mutilated bodies hanging from trees and burning in flames. 

Imperialist Industrialization (1945), a linoleum cut by Leopoldo Méndez points to the complexities of  Mexico’s shift from an overwhelmingly agricultural economy to an industrial one at the expense of the poor.

Méndez  was one of the founders of the influential Taller de Gráfica Popular (People’s Graphic Art Workshop). Declaring its  commitment to “the progressive and democratic interests of the Mexican people,” this printmaking collective and  artist community opened its doors to all regardless of their race  or social standing, including visitors from abroad. 

Three works by  Taller de Gráfica Popular artist Elizabeth Catlett include   

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My right is a future of equality with otherAmericans (1946 - 47), the final print from the artist’s series, The Negro Woman.This epic narrative tells of the  struggles, oppressions, and achievements of African American women.    
http://collection.mcnayart.org/images/zoom/prints/2000.62%20siqueiros.jpg

Reclining Nude (1931) by Siqueiros is a recently acquired transfer lithograph of his companion Uruguayan poet  Blanca Luz Brum that was created while theartist was living in exile in the remote mining town  of Taxco. Its intermingling, three - dimensional forms seem to oscillate between stone sculpture and human flesh. 

Crossing Borders: Mexican Modernist Prints is curated by Senior Curator of Prints, Drawings & Photographs Rena  Hoisington. 


José Clemente Orozco (Mexican, 1883-1949). Mexican Pueblo. 1930.

 

Diego Rivera | La maestra rural [The Rural Teacher] (1932)


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