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A Companion to Modern and Contemporary Latin American and Latina/o Art


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known of these new groups, Tepito Arte Acá, of the barrio Tepito in Mexico City, evolved in the late 1970s‐early 1980s as a leaderless collective of activists devoted to protecting their unique neighborhood from intrusions by the city government. One of their group, Daniel Manrique, painted large figures on walls facing the street and courtyards, picturing daily lives and concerns of the local Tepiteños. Rough, black outlines of figures were applied to unprepared surfaces and filled in with unmodulated colors. The scaffolding was a tall ladder moved back and forth. This group touched a raw nerve among young artists disillusioned with social ambition and empowered them to develop their own versions of engaged and unofficial wall art.

      Printmaking is, by definition, an explicitly social art medium, meaning that its potential for producing multiple “originals” vastly increases its viewing population and reduces the price of individual pieces. Prints made in Mexico during the modern period fully exploit this potential, in their manufacture, distribution, and in their imagery (see Prignitz‐Poda 1992, and Ittmann 2006). José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) is the dominant single artist in this category, as his life spanned the Díaz regime and its demise and overlapped the first years of the revolution. Mostly known as a political cartoonist and illustrator, Posada chronicled the politics of his time with deeply sarcastic images of abuses by all sorts of authority upon the poor and miserable masses. Natural disasters and sensationalistic crimes also captured his attention. His use of the calavera, or skeleton, as the persona for all sorts of human folly and corruption gained him wide and popular attention. These bony personifications of politicians, drunken peasants, and dancers at parties are dry commentary on the emptiness of the Mexican character but also celebrate the ironic victory over death observed by Mexican folklore as during the Day of the Dead. Posada's deep immersion in the issues of his time and his direct yet expressive style gained a faithful following from the mural painters, especially Rivera.

      Consider this excerpt from the 1945 TGP manifesto: “The TGP undergoes a constant effort, in order to benefit by its works the progressive and democratic interests of the Mexican people, especially in the fight against fascist reaction” (Wright‐Rios 1988, p. 19).

      The setting is a Mexico City theater of that name. Ocampo, who joined LEAR in 1936 and the TGP in 1937, has taken a highly unorthodox view of the interior of the theater, in that we do not see the stage, or the seats, or even the spectators in any explicit manner. Rather, he concentrates on a sweeping angle of the overhanging balcony, suspended by a single post, emphasizing the sleek modernism of the architecture. This sort of understated, studied, and formalist attention to its subject separates this print from so much of the overheated drama of typical TGP production and recalls the geometric forms of European modernist movements.

Schematic illustration of Isidoro Ocampo, At the Follies, 19 40.

      Source: Collection of the McNay Art Museum, San Antonio. Gift of the Gallery of the McNay, 1990.96. Reproduced with permission.

      But why are we, the bourgeoisie, looking away from the melodrama on the stage at all; why is this scene now more important, maybe even more dramatic? Because the mob is about to spill over, on top of us, to transgress their spatial and social limits, to lead this plunge with that menacing hand, and who knows how many will follow these four or six. The architecture itself is suffering under this strain and will surely give way, soon. And, somehow, if you look with a certain fear of the symbols of class warfare, the post and the balcony somehow look like the shaft and head of a hammer, and the parabolic curve somehow like the sweep of a sickle, these two implements oddly combined into one form, supporting the workers but also about to deliver them into areas not allowed to them, for now. The classes that are at present separated by form and custom are about to engage in a sudden and new way.