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HomeShop at BookSurgeBusiness & EconomicsHuman Resources & Personnel ManagementSiqueiros: Biography of a Revolutionary Artist |
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Art Born in Revolution Jul 28, 2009
By Stephen Wilson Through the life story of its leading proponent, "Siqueiros" brings to light a unique movement in art, Mexican "social realism" that believed art should belong to the people and used murals as their delivery medium. Diego Rivera is (to this reader, anyway) the most famous of the Mexican muralists, but this book makes clear that David Alfaro Siqueiros was the driving force. A dynamo, a whirlwind of activity all his life, Siqueiros fought in the Mexican Revolution and the Spanish Civil War, and throughout his life fought for social justice and freedom of expression of the arts, for which he was repeatedly jailed, finally for four years near the end of his life until pardoned by President López Mateos.
Throughout his life he mocked the European tradition of "easel painting", the "apolitical Bohemian", the "intellectual snob." Instead, teams of artists and masons worked with him to create vast murals for public viewing that depicted the revolutionary struggle of the people against exploitation. It was an art of large figures lunging at the viewer, filled with vibrant color for which Siqueiros continuously explored paint technology that would last outdoors such as pigments developed for automobiles, and tools such as photographic projection, spray painting, blowtorches and cement guns for the unique needs of murals.
The author has a clear writing style and has produced a book that is impressive for the depth of its research, filled with personal anecdotes (Siqueiros once had to speed away from gunmen out to kill him, and was even implicated in an attempt to assassinate Leon Trotsky). And it's not just about Siqueiros. The artist's story is set against an exploration of Mexican culture, and a background of Mexico's often tortured history.
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