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Cutura Article - Issue 40 - by Tlecu Omitl
"An
artist is above all a human being, profoundly human to the core.
If the artist can’t feel everything that humanity feels,
if the artist isn’t capable of loving until he forgets
himself and sacrifices himself if necessary, if he won’t
put down his magic brush and head the fight against the oppressor,
then he isn’t a great artist." Diego Rivera is considered
the greatest Mexican painter of the twentieth century, the father
of Mexican mural art and the father of modern political art
in Mexico. Diego was an important personality in the art world
of the 20th century and his thoughts were well respected in
the art community. He was an innovator in expressing his ideals
unifying art and politics. Among his many contributions, Rivera
is credited with the reintroduction of fresco painting into
modern art and architecture.
Diego María
de la Rivera y Barrientos and his twin brother Carlos were born
on December 13, 1886 in Leon, Guanajuato. Carlos died in 1888,
which left Diego as an only child. After the death of Diego's
brother, María Barrientos developed a terrible neurosis.
In order to take her out of it she decided to study a career
and successfully graduated in Obstetrics. Diego's other mother
was Antonia, his Indian nanny. He had very poor health when
he was young and his parents sent him to the mountains to live
with Antonia. Diego had a very precious memory of her. Antonia
was an inspiration for many of his paintings and his love for
the indigenous culture.
Diego's
parents gave him colored chalk as a homecoming present. Diego
loved to draw so much that he drew pictures all over. So his
parents gave him a studio with blackboards for walls. Diego
covered the blackboards with pictures so that the whole room
had murals all around. Diego daydreamed a lot in school and
imagined the colors and sights of the mountains and the jungles.
He loved to go to church to see the colorful paintings.
Finally,
his parents sent him to art school. However, even though it
was an honor to go to art school at such a young age, Diego
did not like the projects there. He did not want to paint from
models or sculptures of people; he wanted to paint from real
life! So he did paint from life on his own. He painted people
celebrating the Day of The Dead, and people at fiestas such
as at Cinco de Mayo. He also painted things he saw that were
very sad. For example, he painted soldiers shooting workers
on strike. He painted other scenes of the people's struggle
for equality in Mexico.
In 1896,
while he was still in high school, he entered the Academy of
San Carlos. He was so obviously talented that in 1906, after
his first show, he was granted a four-year scholarship from
the governor of Veracruz, Teodoro Dahesa, to continue his studies
in Europe. In 1907 he goes to Spain, where he promptly becomes
part of the intellectual circles. After studying there for two
years he moves to Paris and starts living with Angelina Beloff.
Diego and
Angelina had a son but due to a flu epidemic the child died
in the fall of 1918. Diego had many lovers; among them was Marvena,
another Russian woman. Diego and Marvena had a child named Marika
right after the death of Angelina's baby. Diego precisely describes
his relationship with Angelina when he says, "She gave
me everything a woman can give to a man. In return, she received
from me all the heartache and misery that a man can inflict
upon a woman."
While studying
in Spain, Rivera was fascinated by the works of Cézanne,
who introduced him to cubism. He was also very interested in
Mondrian and created many paintings reproducing his style. His
greatest influence, however, was Pablo Picasso's. Diego was
interested in cubism because it questioned the pre-established
conceptions of painting. With his cubist work, such as "Zapatista
Landscape," " Woman at the Well" and "Sailor
at Lunch," Rivera earned recognition among the artistic
circles in Paris. This technique, however, did not fulfill him
completely because he felt a lack of originality in his work.
He was following Picasso's trend and felt that he would never
be like him.
This is
why he decides to find his own style by going back to a more
realistic way of painting. The art community abandoned Diego,
which left him in absolute poverty because no one would buy
his paintings. This decision proved costly to his reputation
as a modernist, but not to the evolution of his aesthetics.
The situation, however, forced Diego to go back to Mexico.
Diego arrived
in Mexico on July of 1921 and met José Vasconcelos right
away. Vasconcelos was a philosopher in charge of the Ministry
of Education, and part of the new regime after the revolution.
He had very innovative ideas on how to change the educational
system in Mexico. One of these ideas was the creation of murals
on public buildings so that art could be shared with the masses.
The themes of the murals would try to portray Mexican identity.
Vasconcelos sent a couple of important artists, Diego Rivera
among them, to travel around the country to collect sketches
of the daily life of peasants and indigenous people. At his
arrival, in 1922, Diego was assigned his first mural at the
National Preparatory School. This first mural was called "Creation."
Diego Rivera's style was the product of the influence of many
different art styles, such as cubism, impressionism, classical
European style and Aztec art. His murals had a busyness that
reminds us the Baroque, covering Churches with images and details.
Some critics referred to Diego's particular style as "agoraphobic"
because he seemed to be afraid of having open space in his paintings.
In his murals he uses many symbols that come from Aztec codices.
For example, he uses the colors and figures of idols, as well
as the way in which the Indians used images to narrate myths
and historical events. In some of his work we can see a use
of space that comes from cubism (in Creation, for example) and
a use of perspective that comes from his early classical studies.
In the sketches of the murals we can see how he used architectural
skills as well as a lot of geometry. Rivera was a very skilled
painter, and as José Vasconcelos says, "everything
could be forgiven to Diego because he knew how to paint with
exact drawing and perfect coloring when he wanted". Diego
did not like "Creation" because, on his view, it did
not portray well the Mexican character. It was based too much
on classic European style. The symbolism of the mural represents
the emergence of man (at the center) who has his arms open to
represent sacrifice and offering; the standing figures represent
the theological virtues: Charity, Hope and Faith; the rest of
the figures are knowledge, erotic poetry, tradition, tragedy,
justice and strength; the mestizo couple represents the fusion
of racial strains. The mural was inaugurated on March 9th of
1923.
Diego's
second wife was Guadalupe Marín of Guadalajara. Concha
Michel, the famous singer, introduced Diego and Lupe. About
the way in which they met, Diego recalls that Concha wanted
to be his lover but she could not be because she was married.
In order to take away the temptation of an affair with him she
decided to find for him a woman who would be "handsomer,
freer and braver" than her. Diego loved and admired Lupe.
He also loved her body, which he painted in many of his work
(in the Chapingo murals for example). In his biography he refers
to her as a "beautiful, spirited animal", with hair
that "looked more like that of a chestnut," with hands
"that had the beauty of tree roots or eagle talons."
The problem with Lupe for Diego was her jealousy and possessiveness,
which, added to the fact that Diego was not a faithful husband
created all kinds of uncomfortable fights. Their relationship
ended before Diego left to go to Russia in 1927 to participate
in the celebration of tenth anniversary of the October revolution.
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