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| Diego Rivera's signature on one of the frescos. (notice the hammer and sickle?) |
One of the biggest personal discoveries, for me, was the huge range of work, created by Diego Rivera. Just in Mexico City, there are dozens and dozens of his HUGE powerful and deeply meaningful murals. His sense of composition, and the strong message is incomparable. While at Palacia de Bellas Artes, I saw a video of his murals located at the Secretary of Publication Building in Mexico City. I knew I had to see them!
The Building is huge, filled with working offices. It's free to go in. Unfortunately, we didn't have a guide, so many of the murals messages remain a mystery to me. I am starting my research!
(Links for are at the bottom of this post)
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| The Secretary of Education Building, interior courtyard |
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| A couple of murals were being painstakingly restored, with a teeny tiny brush |
These are all photos I took with my Iphone.
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| Santa Anita (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1922-24) |
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| The Market (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923-24) |
Looks kinda like Diego, in the jacket doesn't it?
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| The Dyers (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923) |
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| Sugar Mill (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923) |
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| The Rural Teacher (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923) |
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| The Harvest (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923) |
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| The Offering (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923) |
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| Day of the Dead (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923-24) |
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| Tehuantepec Women (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1923) |
The murals on the lower level depict the story of Mexico. The murals on the 3rd floor are clearly more political.
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| We Want to Work (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1928) |
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| Wall Street Banquet (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1928) |
So, the mural above was done right before the fall of Wall Street, and the start of the Depression...
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| Literacy (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1928) |
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| Emiliano Zapata (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1928) |
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| The Protest (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1928) |
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| He Who Want to Eat has to Work (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1928) |
Look at the figure in the bottom of the above mural.
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| Here's a detail shot. The figure seems to be an artist...music, paint, books. Is she/he wearing lamb's ears? I have no idea! |
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| In the Arsenal (Fresco by Diego Rivera 1929 |
Clearly Frida Kahlo made it into one of the murals. Above.