the gm de mexico collection of drawings and graphic art
Transcription
the gm de mexico collection of drawings and graphic art
THE GM DE MEXICO COLLECTION OF DRAWINGS AND GRAPHIC ART THE GM DE MEXICO COLLECTION OF DRAWINGS AND GRAPHIC ART Project leader: Teresa Cid Cabello Editorial Coordination: Sara Silva Montiel and Elizabeth Arreguín Vera Curation: Pilar García González and Susana Pliego Quijano Museography: Giacomo Castagnola and Erik López Photos: Michel Zabé www.gm.com.mx comunicacion.gmm@gm.com Facebook: General Motors Mexico Twitter: @GeneralMotorsMX Exhibited at the Mexican Cultural Institute May-September 2016 www.instituteofmexicodc.org culturemexico@instituteofmexicodc.org Facebook: Mexican Cultural Institute DC Twitter: @mexculturedc Over the last 80 years, our country has maintained rapid economic, social and cultural development, inextricably linked to a number of stakeholders, including those in the private sector, which are mostly represented by companies generating both economic and social well-being. General Motors has been one of those actors present in the country’s history, bringing investment, training, economic growth and job creation, in addition to contributing to the human factor through its constant involvement in projects focused on social responsibility and activities promoting and strengthening culture. As part of these efforts, in the 1960s General Motors created a collection of drawings and etchings with the primary aim of reuniting art forms that offered an overview of the cultural life of Mexico City. The works belong to artists of the stature of Julio Ruelas, Francisco Goitia, José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Rufino Tamayo and Carlos Mérida. The collection, originally composed of 260 pieces, consists of works done through various techniques, including ink, gouache, watercolor, pastel, graphite, charcoal and collage, as well as lithography and wood and metal etching. The GM collection features Diego Rivera’s drawing Carnaval de Huejotzingo, which was the sketch for one of the four portable murals made by the artist to decorate the Hotel Reforma in the early thirties. It also includes José Clemente Orozco’s La borracha, a sketch of the Catarsis mural painted specifically for the inauguration of the Palace of Fine Arts, and a sketch by David Alfaro Siqueiros for his Nuestra imagen actual, a striking canvas done in 1943 that is today part of the collection of the Museum of Modern Art. The works of art integrated into the GM collection form a legacy that deserves to be placed before the eyes of Mexican society, and we are certain you will appreciate the wealth of material we have collected and preserved to this day. That is why, as we celebrate the 80th anniversary of General Motors de Mexico, we have prepared The General Motors de Mexico Collection of Drawings and Graphic Art exhibition with the production of important curators, who have managed to rescue the history of these works to design a true taste of Mexican art in the twentieth century. I invite you to enjoy this artistic compendium, that represents part of our national culture and identity. Ernesto M. Hernández President and Managing Director GM de Mexico, Central America and The Caribbean The GM de Mexico Collection of Drawings and Graphic Art is a collaborative effort between the Government of Mexico and a company that has been an active contributor to the economy and culture of Mexico for more than eight decades. GM has witnessed and participated in the evolution and construction of North America as the most competitive region in the world, characterized by the complementarity of its markets and strength of its shared values. As this collection shows, GM’s link with Mexico transcends the economic sphere and impacts our society through promotion, recognition and preservation of Mexican art and cultural expressions. Without the efforts of GM, the preservation of the works in this collection might never have taken place and would most likely not be available for our viewing today. Thanks to the endeavor of its team of curators we are able to share this artwork, and through it an important aspect of Mexico’s cultural heritage and worldview. This collection showcases the diversity and richness of Mexican art in the twentieth century. It includes the works of masters of Mexican Muralism and many others who contributed to social change and development in Mexico through art. The pieces in this exhibition, meticulously curated and preserved, are outstanding examples of this legacy and comprehensive and balanced in their diverse yet congruent selection. The collection’s reach extends far beyond Mexico, penetrating into international artistic dialogues and movements. Through its inclusion of Mexican and foreign-born artists alike, it articulates the ways in which Mexican art has participated in global artistic narratives. While it tells of Mexico’s journey toward modernization, it also tells the story of Mexico’s increasing internationalization and contribution to global contemporary thought and expression. It is the international importance of these pieces that makes the collection’s first exhibition outside of Mexico so significant. The exhibit at the Mexican Cultural Institute, a building which itself embodies the intersection and dialogue between Mexico and the United States, represents a key step in sharing Mexico’s culture and identity with the people of its closest neighbor and partner. Through The GM de Mexico Collection of Drawings and Graphic Art, we celebrate the intellectual and spiritual connection between Mexico and the multinational artistic view and interpretation of a country whose history is intricately tied with the history of the United States. Carlos Manuel Sada Solana Ambassador of Mexico to the United States The GM de Mexico Collection of Drawings and Graphic Art Pilar García González Susana Pliego Quijano Man is alone everywhere. But the solitude of the Mexican under the great stone night of the high plateau that is still inhabited by insatiable gods, is very different from that of the North American, who wanders in an abstract world of machines, fellow citizens and moral precepts.1 Octavio Paz In 1968, General Motors de Mexico (GMM) began the task of creating a collection of Mexican art: La colección de dibujos y grabados de GM de Mexico. Originally consisting of 260 pieces, the collection was intended to demonstrate the distinct character of Mexican art and the development of Mexican graphic arts in the 20th century. It was an ambitious project that united pieces by prominent Mexican artists and other artistic expressions of the time, all of which offered an overview of the cultural life of Mexico City in the 1960s. In 1969, the magazine Texas Quarterly published Image of Mexico: the General Motors de Mexico Collection of Mexican Graphic Art in two volumes. The piece, which included works, photographs and biographies of artists2, was intended to serve not only as a catalog of the collection but also as a reference of Mexican art in the early 20th century. The international publication was a bilingual edition with a foreword written by the painter and critic Toby Joysmith and a second review by Thomas Brown, cultural attaché of the US Embassy in Mexico and admirer of Mexican culture. The publication also had the support of the US cultural diplomacy. The collection was formed from 1968-69, when Richard Ehrlich was the President of General Motors de Mexico (1968); it was the time of Vietnam, the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., the hippie movement, the student movement of October 2 in Mexico, as well as the Olympics and the construction of the Ruta de la Amistad. The curator whom 1. Paz, Octavio. The Labyrinth of Solitude: Life and Thought in Mexico. p. 19.Trans. Lysander Kemp. New York: Grove press, 1961. Print. 2. “Image of Mexico; the General Motors of Mexico Collection of Mexican Graphic Art”, Texas Quarterly, Vol. XII, Numbers 3-4, UT, Summer/Fall 1969, Editor: Harry H. Ransom, special editor: Thomas Mabry Cranfill, photo editor : Hans Beacham [and others]. Artist names A-K appear in Image of Mexico I (No. 3); names L-Z appear in Image of Mexico II (No. 4). Ehrlich selected for the collection was Thomas Mabry Cranfill (1913-1995), an interesting figure in the cultural life of the 20th century. Ehrlich and Cranfill both shared a passion for art collecting and participated in the search to articulate a diverse collection. Cranfill was selected as curator of works in part due to his experience as a professor of English at the University of Texas at Austin and his participation in the 1965 creation of another corporate collection called The Braniff International Airways Collection of South American Art, documented in an edited volume by the university. Cranfill was also an editor for Texas Quarterly, a well-known literature review founded in 1958, whose first special volume, published in 1959, was dedicated to Mexican art and literature in the mid-20th century. The volume contains a selection of photographs, poems, stories and drawings that were later published in the book The Muse in Mexico: A Mid-Century Miscellany. His academic accomplishments, experience in Mexican and international culture, enlightened knowledge of both English and Spanish, as well as his work authoring several publications and other US corporate collections, made Cranfill an ideal candidate to carry out a project of this size. Of great importance for the GMM project was the participation of photographer Hans Beacham, author of The Architecture of Mexico: Yesterday and Today (edited by Architectural Book Publishing, New York, 1969). In his book, Beacham discovered the beauty hidden in the details of Mexican architecture, revealing the refined eye that characterized him. Hans accompanied Cranfill on numerous lengthy trips to Mexico City, where they inhabited a Porfiriana-style house on Calle de Puebla 303, Colonia Roma. Beacham set up his photography studio on Calle Sevilla, a few blocks from his house; it is likely that many of the high quality artist photographs that appeared in the original collection of General Motors de Mexico were taken there. Artists like Francisco Goitia, Remedios Varo, Antonio Ruiz, Dr. Atl, Adolfo Best Maugard, Leopoldo Méndez and Roberto Montenegro (already dead in 1969), were photographed by Beacham, who since 1960 had begun the task of portraying Mexico’s most renowned artists. Beacham was also responsible for writing the biographical notes for the catalog of the GMM collection published by Texas Quarterly. For the construction of the General Motors de Mexico collection, Cranfill also had the generous help of his friends, many of whom were essential in the development of Mexican art, and who assisted Cranfill in the selection of artists and placement of works. He also had the cooperation of official institutions such as the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana, the Galería de la Ciudad de México, the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and the Organización para la Promoción Internacional de la Cultura of the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs. Another group of advisers was comprised of smaller and less consecrated private galleries and art patrons that followed the latest trends in Mexican art. Among them were the Galería de Arte Mexicano, directed by Inés Amor, who was the link between public and private artistic projects; the Galería de Antonio Souza; the Galería Edward Munch, directed by Leopoldo Ayala; Alberto Misrachi from Galería Misrachi; Malu Block of the Galería Juan Martín; the Pecanins sisters; and Carlos Eduardo Turón, among others. Cranfill also integrated into the project people like Mathias Goeritz, who arrived to Mexico in 1949 as a teacher in Guadalajara and whose imprint on Mexican art is undeniable. Other individuals who participated in the articulation of the GMM collection were Merle Wachter, professor at the Universidad de las Américas and director of the Instituto Mexicano-Norteamericano de Relaciones Culturales; the critic Toby Joysmith, who managed the cultural section in The News; John L. Brown, US cultural attaché in Mexico; as well as Betty and Kirk Boyer, collectors of Mexican graphic arts. Cranfill and his advisers visited many of the galleries in Mexico City exhibiting works that exemplified the aesthetic eclecticism characteristic of the time, influenced by the height of a new era of mass communication and marketing, as well as the economic boom. The curator included artists who first caught his attention in the 1950s and who managed to maintain relevance into the 1960s, when the General Motors de Mexico Collection was formed. He positioned at the head of this group José Luis Cuevas, who, according to the opinion of John L. Brown, was “the Mexican graphic artist who stands out most in this period and fully deserves the high international acclaim he has acquired.”3 The collection hoped to achieve a national and international reach, thanks to the diversity of its themes. The GMM Collection is made up of works that use paper as their foundation, and, as such, consists of graphic works and original drawings made through various techniques including the use of ink, gouache, watercolor, pastel, graphite, charcoal, collage and a variety of stamping techniques, including wood and metal etching and lithog3. John L. Brown, “Ademán incauto,” Image of Mexico, Vol. I, p. 45. raphy. The fact that the works are on paper emphasizes not only their character as pieces of visual enjoyment, but also their use as a means of propaganda. According to art historian Justino Fernández, one of the liveliest and most varied Mexican artistic expressions is contemporary graphic work, which shows an aspect that is, on the one hand, predominantly critical and dramatic and, secondly, lyrical and folkloric. “A lot of fine works have been produced in lithography; of these and of the etched works, one can not only appreciate the high technical achievement, but also gain a perception of what the artists feel, think and imagine.”4 Quite possibly it was this notable art critic and historian who provided the team of curators an initial list of Mexican artists to undertake the search for works. The collection begins, logically and chronologically, with an engraving by José Guadalupe Posada, considered the forefather of modern Mexican art, as well as the bridge between the art of the 19th and 20th centuries, and ends with a lavish and audacious selection of new and promising names from younger generations, achieving a mix of emerging and established artists. The selection includes big names from the early 20th century like Julio Ruelas and Francisco Goitia. It also includes “The Three Greats,” muralists José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros, as well as Rufino Tamayo and Carlos Mérida. Works of other internationally recognized artists are presented in the collection as well, such as Gunter Gerszo, Federico Cantú, Ricardo Martínez, Enrique Climent, Jesús Guerrero Galván and Antonio Rodríguez Luna. The collection also includes the work of artists not born in Mexico who enriched the cultural life of the country; some originating from Europe and other eastern countries, including Mathias Goeritz, Waldemar Sjøndlaer, Leonora Carrington, Lucas Johnson, Jacobo Glantz, Toby Joysmith, Jean Charlot, Kasuya Sakai and Milo Needles. As for its geographical scope, the collection housed works of the states of Oaxaca, Chiapas and Yucatán, in the south; Nuevo León, Tamaulipas and Coahuila in the north, and cities like Guadalajara, Morelia and San Miguel de Allende. The print run of the publication of the work must have been more than 9,000 copies of both volumes, as GM de Mexico alone received a batch of 4,500. To print Image of Mexico, required that the drawings and etchings be sent to Austin, Texas to be photographed and analyzed. Although the collection was not yet announced, General Motors de Mexico paid for a selection of works to be mounted in eight displays for a small ex4. Ibid., p. 38. hibition that sought to highlight artistic harmony and dialogue between the works, either through style, technique or theme. The works were organized in eight displays that acted as thematic sections: Display 1: Artists who exemplify the miniature in Mexico Display 2: Works from the contemporary Mexican muralist movement of the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, called social realism in the United States Display 3: An agrarian and tropical Mexico, and portraits of children Display 4: Menagerie and flora Display 5: Faces and figures Display 6: Mexican surrealism Display 7: Influences in Mexican art: Spanish and French Display 8: Abstraction, composition or construction In order to create as complete a collection as possible, Austin included works on loan from other artists from whom it was not possible to acquire pieces. Beacham leant works by Trama, Maka Strauss and Lavalle. On their behalf, drawings by Iya Lady Abdy, Tamiji Kitagawa, Agustín Lazo and Alfredo Ramos Martínez were loaned by various private collections. The works of Jean Charlot, Frida Kahlo, Rafael Balderama, Castelar Báez, Emilio Vera, Ignacio Aguirre, Isabel Villaseñor and José Julio Rodríguez come from the permanent collection of the Center for Humanistic Research of the University of Texas at Austin. Finally, the Galería Juan Martín facilitated the lending of a work by Remedios Varo. With the objective of publicizing the Collection within Mexico, a number of sites and cities were explored as possible exhibition locations. Among them were the major capitals of various Mexican states, as well as spaces in cities along the border, la Casa de la Cultura de Guadalajara, the Museo de Arte Moderno, some commercial galleries in Mexico City, the Museo Universitario de Ciencias y Artes (MUCA) at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) and the Galería Aristos, also at UNAM. Helen Escobedo, director of the MUCA and participating collection artist held talks with GMM; however this option was rejected for its distance Mexico City’s downtown and the Zona Rosa, which was the center of cultural life in the city at that time. On September 30, 1971 a selection of works from the collection was inaugurated at the Nabor Carrillo exhibition space of the Instituto Mexicano Norteamericano de Relaciones Culturales (Hamburgo 115, Zona Rosa). The president of GM de Mexico, John F. Beck, and his wife opened the exhibit, which was described as “a positive stimulus to our artists of the brush, pen and chisel.”5 The exhibition was featured in broadcast media as well as profiles by journalists and art critics. The collection was hailed as “one of the richest in the country.”6 Cultural institutions expressed their interest in presenting the collection in New York and other sites around the US as a way of strengthening trade ties between the two countries. Moreover, in 1975, to celebrate forty years of business in Mexico, General Motors de Mexico gifted the collection catalog to customers, distributors and friends. In July of 1973, heavy rains caused the roof of the warehouse where the collection was housed to collapse.7 Fortunately, no work was damaged. It may have been this fact that sparked a renewed interest in the collection, its valuation and its fate. Around 1974, GMM approached various art appraisers to explore the sale of the collection, always wanting it to remain intact through any transfer of ownership. Offers from both Mexican and American collectors arrived at the offices of GMM. The very same Thomas Cranfill made an offer to the President of General Motors de Mexico, William G. Slocum Jr., to acquire the collection; however, his request was rejected.8 Donating the work to the Museo de Arte Moderno or to some other cultural institution within Mexico was also considered. Jaime Saldívar, director of Club de Industriales, suggested gifting the collection to the Government of Mexico so that it might be exhibited throughout the country, which would have resulted in “a very good advertising campaign to make the donation known.”9 However, none of these efforts came to fruition and today the collection is still part of General Motors de Mexico. In 2010, the Museo Nacional de Arte (MUNAL) exhibited a selection of 51 pieces from the collection under the title Vanguardia en papel. Figura y abstracción. Colección de General Motors. In 2011 Arte gráfico Mexicano (1940-1972). La colección General Motors de Mexico was presented in the Centro Cultural Texcoco of the Instituto Mexiquense de Cultura, in collaboration with MUNAL, the institution that cared for the works until 2015, when they returned to the offices of GM de Mexico. 5. “Las artes plásticas y General Motors”, Autonoticias, October 23, 1971, GM de Mexico Archives. 6. “200 obras de arte en”, El Universal, October 30, 1971. 7. Report from A. Flores Muñoz to A. Gómez Obregón, July 30, 1973, GM de Mexico Archives. 8. Alberto Gómez Obregón, GM de Mexico Director of Public and Industrial Relations to Thomas Cranfill, September 18, 1975, GM de Mexico Archives. 9. Alberto Gómez Obregón to William G. Slocum Jr., July 31, 1974, GM de Mexico Archives. 2015: THE GENERAL MOTORS COLLECTION OF MEXICAN GRAPHIC ART CELEBRATED 80 YEARS OF GM IN MEXICO AND THE COMPANY’S COMMITMENT TO THE COUNTRY AND ITS CULTURE The exhibition that is currently displayed at the galleries of the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington DC is based on the framework of the 2015 exhibition in the offices of GMM celebrating the 80th anniversary of the company in Mexico. Unlike former projects that have showcased GM de Mexico’s collection, these selected works seek to reclaim the meaning, objectives and the value that gave birth to the configuration of this collection of drawings and prints that were shaped by this company over 45 years ago. The exhibited works highlight the original standard of their selection while simultaneously documenting the development of Mexican art throughout the first 60 years of the 20th century. The division into thematic sections retakes the original staging and seeks to understand the context in which the collection was created, and is the reason why GM de Mexico sought to display the artist portraits just as they were in that historic moment. The exhibition is divided into five thematic sections: Works from the ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Contemporary to the Muralist Movement; The Persistence of the Past; Dreams, Imagination, and Fantasy; Abstraction and Deconstruction; Psychedelic and Optic Art. 1. WORKS FROM THE ‘20S, ‘30S, AND ‘40S CONTEMPORARY TO THE MURALIST MOVEMENT The first thematic core of the exhibition guides us through Mexican graphic arts of the first decades of the 20th century. Without a doubt, this is the stage of Mexican art that embraced the revolutionary narrative, enjoyed the greatest diffusion in the United States and is most heavily represented in the collection. At the end of the armed phase of the Mexican Revolution, José Vasconcelos pioneered muralism and invited the best artists in the country to paint, on the walls of public buildings, images that would homogenize Mexicans around a common identity. The artists of the so-called Mexican artistic renaissance (or social realism in the United States), among them “The Three Great Ones” Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros, are important to the popularization of the nationalist imaginary of the post revolution. They depicted the ideologies of the history of Mexico, its people, traditions and pastimes. The pretext was to unify a heterogeneous country with common concepts. This was the way that the different stereotypes that make up the Mexican nation on an ideological level were conformed. The concept of the mestizo and the people as the protagonists of history were unifying concepts that manifested themselves in these post-revolutionary decades. Several artists united to search for a more effective way to promote revolutionary ideology through manifestos and the creation of unions that aligned with the collective efforts of the ‘20s. Painters, eager to respond to the nascent unions, and inspired by the Russian revolution, created their own union in 1922; the Sindicato de Obreros Técnicos, Pintores y Escultores (SOTPE), a group whose ideology was inspired by the Communist Party. They signed their creed and published their manifesto as a collective combative text in the pages of their informative media, the newspaper El Machete. The manifesto heightens the creative collective, the socialization of art and the commitment of making public art for the service of the Revolution, as well as demonstrating a longing to find a national identity in the indigenous peoples of Mexico. In 1934, after the dissolution of the SOTPE, the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios (LEAR) was formed. Its sphere of influence extended beyond plastic arts to literature, theatre, music, photography and science. Leopoldo Méndez, Luis Arenal, Fernando Gamboa, Pablo O´Higgins, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Xavier Guerrero, José Chávez Morado, Emilio Abreu, Alfredo Zalce, Santos Balmori, Clara Porcet, Dolores Cueto and Ángel Bracho became part of this new group. The artists fought for freedom and opposed government censure of art. This body, with leftist tendencies, fought against imperialism and fascism, supported the workers’ suffrage, unified progressive intellectuals and believed in the social function of art. It sought to take literary and artistic work to the masses. Its instrument of propaganda was the Frente a Frente newspaper, illustrated by Pablo O’Higgins, among others. The LEAR split and some of its members founded the Taller de Gráfica Popular (TGP) in 1937, with a mission of making graphic works to benefit the masses. The messages were political and social complaints, as well as support to unions and working-class organizations. Using pamphlets and posters to transmit their propagandistic messages, they hoped to combat imperialism, Nazism and war; art became militancy. Ultimately, collective production gave Mexican printmaking a distinctive and renown appearance internationally. Under the leadership of Leopoldo Méndez, works by Luis Arenal, Pablo O’Higgins, José Chávez Morado, Alfredo Zalce, Ángel Bracho, Francisco Dosamantes, Everardo Ramírez, Alberto Beltrán and Mariana Yampolski, among others, are proof of the excellent quality that was attained. In the fall of 1939, when World War II broke out, the TGP created several series of posters depicting war themes. The work that was developed in the TGP’s creative space attracted foreign artists like Bolivian Roberto Berdecio and Ecuadorian Galo Galecio. American artists, Elizabeth Catlett, and especially Pablo O’Higgins, adopted Mexico as their homeland. The exchanges that occurred with these visitors echoed beyond Mexico. In 1947, and akin to the Taller de Gráfica Popular, the Sociedad Mexicana de Grabadores was created with a goal of renewing printmaking techniques and restoring their aesthetic value. They achieved an energetic expression through wood prints, devoid of perspective and a profoundness in which action stands out. The graphic arts of the beginning of the 20th century were used as elements of denunciation and critique, social and political alike, in newspapers and magazines. Due to their strong ideological content and their great expressive simplicity, they were interwoven with the aspirations, joys and fears of the working class. José Guadalupe Posada represents the authentic manifestations of the working class national genius. Production and mass distribution make the flyers, designed by Posada and Antonio Vanegas Arroyo’s press, an ideal medium for the circulation of images. For these reasons, Posada’s prints are considered the predecessors of Mexican Muralism and works by members of the Taller de Gráfica Popular. The GMM collection includes works by “The Three Greats” of Mexican muralism, the first American vanguard and paradigm of national art. Diego Rivera’s Carnaval de Huejotzingo (Carnival of Huejotzingo) drawing is a sketch for one of the four portable murals created to decorate the Reforma Hotel located in the Zona Rosa of Mexico City. Alberto J. Pani commissioned Diego Rivera to paint the murals in 1936, but due to their political weight, they were stored until 1963 when they were moved to the Palacio de Bellas Artes. The four panels that constitute the pictorial cycle of the Hotel Reforma murals are: La dictadura (The dictatorship), Danza de los Huichilobos (Dance of the Huichilobos), México folklórico y turístico (Folkloric and touristic Mexico) and La Leyenda de Agustín Lorenzo (The Legend of Agustín Lorenzo). The GMM collection’s drawing presents a scene from this last section and captures the confrontation between the legendary 20th century bandit and the French troops during the War of Intervention. According to the legend, Agustín Lorenzo kidnapped his beloved Elena, daughter of the Chief Magistrate of Huejotzingo. In the piece, the bandit arrives to the foot of the Municipal Palace in a frenzied mix of music, fireworks and bullets and represented are the kidnapping, wedding, persecution, and liberation. José Clemente Orozco’s work La borracha (The drunk), a sketch for the Catarsis (Catharsis) mural, was created deliberately for the opening of the Palace of Fine Arts in 1934 and is an allegory for war and a disintegration that speaks of social chaos, the machine, prostitution and the struggle. Through fire, humankind can reach purification. David Alfaro Siqueiros’ drawing is a sketch of Nuestra imagen actual (Our current image), a provoking canvas created in 1934 and now part of the Museo de Arte Moderno’s collection. Siqueiros considered art a combat weapon against injustice. In this work, the top of a male nude body exhibits a deformed face of stone, like many pre-Hispanic ruins. This is a figure that updates the pre-Hispanic past and integrates the devastation of World War II; it is humanity, it is the people, and they are all one. The impressive empty hands extend upward, emerging from the work with a prodigious perspective, perhaps supplicating, perhaps showing the condition of emptiness, shortage, incomprehension, pleading and solace. Tropical and agrarian Mexico is part of the imaginary that was created in the ‘20s, ‘30s and ‘40s, of an idyllic and exotic country that increased the value of indigenous cultures and rural life, a faithful representation of otherness. The rift between the primitive and the modern idealized a provincial life, distant from modernity, which shaped a rhetorical construction and identity. This thematic section includes artists who paint the Mexican people from an anthropological and sociological vantage point. Characters perform everyday tasks like cleaning, storing grains in the barn, carrying firewood, harvesting corn, building a well, and working in a mill - acts that could be considered humble and primitive. Regardless, the focus is not poverty but the labor, the beauty and the dignity of the people. Pieces like Río Palizada (Palizada River) by Alfredo Zalce, Cocinando chicle (Cooking sap) by Adolfo Quinteros or Peón de albañil (The bricklayer’s mate) by Pablo O’Higgins display this agrarian Mexico, rural and idealized, that remains on the margins of the economically developed big cities. Through celebrations and rituals, amusement and entertainment, the Mexican reclaimed working-class traditions, creating a year marked by dates belonging to agricultural rituals, as well as Catholic holidays. Thus, the burning of Judas on Holy Saturday was retaken as a tradition considered worthy of preservation. Other Spanish traditions also permeated Mexican culture, like the great fondness for bull-fighting. Moreover, classical music and couples’ visits to hotels were other examples of the many forms of entertainment embraced by the Mexican people. Lastly, ritual dances, some dedicated to the Virgin of Guadalupe, reflect the religious syncretism that binds pre-Hispanic festivities with Christian tradition to conceive singular celebrations. In her piece, Marta Palau is inspired by the Olympic Games of 1968 and depicts an obstacle race with a figure that appears to be extracted from a Greek vessel. The Faces and figures section is realized in a diversity of styles, inspired by international vanguards and Mexican traditions alike. The plurality of the human being is manifested in a mosaic of heterogeneous representations that express a variety of ways to inhabit the world. It includes nudes on occasion, as well as others performing activities characteristic of all social classes - self-portraits, men, women and children display the inner life of humankind. Whether it be a man crying in solitude, groups of prisoners or nude women, all are presented next to portraits that appear to be extracted from an ethnographic catalogue. Lines, stains and geometric figures trace human beings of different races and conditions. The coexistence of humankind with the animal kingdom in Of beasts, flora and landscape is exhibited in a series of compositions in which wild and domesticated animals are depicted. Cows and fish that help feed humanity appear together with an owl done in xylography and a cat, man’s domesticated companion. An affection for animals is demonstrated with a touch of humor. Painstaking details of plants, vegetables, leaves and flowers coexist with great compositions of national landscapes. Iconic places for Mexicans, like El árbol de la noch triste (The tree of the sad night) and Tepoztlán, have a place next to Popocatépetl, protector volcano of the Valley of Mexico and a symbol of national identity depicted grandiosely by Dr. Atl. with a monochromatic stencil. LA BORRACHA (THE DRUNK) José Clemente Orozco 1935 Medium: Etching Measurements: 14.8 x 20 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Critical NUESTRA IMAGEN ACTUAL (OUR CURRENT IMAGE) David Alfaro Siqueiros 1947 Medium: Lithograph Measurements: 29.8 x 22.2 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Critical PEÓN DE ALBAÑIL (THE BRICKLAYER’S MATE) Pablo O´Higgins 1947 Medium: Lithograph Measurements: 38 x 29 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Tropical and agrarian Mexico CARNAVAL DE HUEJOTZINGO (CARNIVAL OF HUEJOTZINGO) Diego Rivera Medium: Pencil Measurements: 12.5 x 7.3 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Tropical and agrarian Mexico ALEGORÍA (ALLEGORY) Brian Nissen 1966 Medium: Ink on paper Measurements: 28.5 x 22.5 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Leisure and entertainment CARRERA DE OBSTÁCULOS (OBSTACLE COURSE) Marta Palau 1968 Medium: Etching, 1/10 Measurements: 26.7 x 44 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Leisure and entertainment CABEZA DE HARLEM (HARLEM BUST) Miguel Covarrubias Medium: Ink on paper Measurements: 25 x 18.5 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Faces and figures CABEZA DE LUNA (FACE OF THE MOON) Rufino Tamayo Medium: Lithograph Measurements: 40 x 29.5 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Faces and figures EL ABRAZO (THE EMBRACE) Emilio Amero 1944 Medium: Lithograph Measurements: 28.3 x 34.3 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Faces and figures POPOCATÉPETL Dr. Atl Medium: Stencil Measurements: 21 x 25.4 cm Section: The ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s Subsection: Of beasts, flora and landscape 2. EVOCATIONS OF THE PAST In the way that European modern art found the “other” of non-western cultures to be exotic and natural, (as evidenced by the way African art was retaken by Pablo Picasso and Polynesian art by Paul Gaugin) Mexican artists found in pre-Hispanic times a glorious past, the ancestral roots of the nation and a common origin among all Mexicans. Myths and legends of ancient civilizations have remained relevant throughout the centuries and pervade modern Mexican culture The imagery included in this thematic section is drawn from diverse traditions. Here we find not only the pre-Hispanic and Spanish, but also elements of classic mythology and other foundations of Western culture (an example of which is the boat, which in many traditions is the vehicle responsible for carrying the dead to their final destination.) The pre-Hispanic monumental architecture is the most remarkable vestige of the Mesoamerican cultures that inhabited Mexican soil before the arrival of the Spaniards and is the most important testimony of their greatness, which has been preserved into the present day. After centuries buried in the jungle, the pyramids acquired a privileged place in the nationalist imaginary after the archaeological discoveries of the nineteenth century. Moreover, the imprint of classical Greek and Roman past on the Western world is undeniable. The achievements of these cultures, including their mythologies, have been filled with characters that are metaphors and archetypes of human behavior, such as Achilles and Patroclus, the minotaur, the winged characters, the faun or the three graces; all of which are represented in the collection of GMM. Part of this mythical past is made reference to in “French and Spanish Influence.” From the sixteenth century onward, the stamp of the Spanish conquest remained in the collective imagination of the nation. During the Porfiriato, France was considered as a model both in the visual arts and architecture. In this way, images of the monarchy and flashes of European culture have permeated Mexico in various ways. Europe has been a leader and an aspiration that has manifested itself in various periods of Mexican history. The imprint left by the art of Velázquez, Goya, Picasso and Miró remains in the works of Mexican artists. An obvious example is the work of Alberto Gironella, which engages in a dialogue with Diego Velázquez’ Las Meninas, a paradigmatic work representing the Spanish monarchy. FIGURAS ALADAS (WINGED FIGURES) Juan Soriano Medium: Etching Measurements: 15 x 22.2 cm Section: Evocations of the past Subsection: Mythic past BESTIARIO (BESTIARY) José Luis Cuevas 1968 Medium: Ink on paper Measurements: 16.8 x 26.2 cm Section: Evocations of the past Subsection: French and Spanish influence VIEJA CON MOÑO (OLD WOMAN WITH BOW) Rafael Coronel 1961 Medium: Charcoal and pastel Measurements: 60 x 46.5 cm Section: Evocations of the past Subsection: French and Spanish influence HOMBRE Y MUJER (MAN AND WOMAN) Gilberto Aceves Navarro Medium: Ink and hematite Measurements: 49 x 65 cm Section: Evocations of the past Subsection: French and Spanish influence 3. DREAMS, IMAGINATION, AND FANTASY In the late 20th century, symbolism showed a patent turn-of-the-century disenchantment. Modernity and materialism had stolen from humanity its spirituality. The imprint of the discovery of the unconscious and the interpretation of dreams studied by Sigmund Freud validated an unaware and senseless reality. The dream world and the reality that exists beyond that which the senses can identify broke into the visual arts first in Europe and later through the Academy of San Carlos in Mexico. The piece by Julio Ruelas, draftsman and Symbolist painter and Professor at the Academy, shows a scorpion woman hugging a character crucified with the text “Relentless” engraved on the base of the cross. A few years later, the Surrealists took the symbolist creations as inspiration and created compositions based on the world of dreams, imagination and fantasy. They were liberated from the canonical art compositions and gave free rein to their creativity. The compositions do not obey logic or reason and are fantastic creations of the wonderful world that seems to emerge from the inner life of the human being. André Breton visited Mexico in 1938 and, along with Leon Trotsky and Diego Rivera, launched the manifest “For an Independent Revolutionary Art.” The text is one that reclaims for intellectual creation an anarchist regime of individual liberty. Breton’s visit sparked a series of surrealist events that gave feedback to poets, writers and painters. On January 17, 1940 an International Exhibition of Surrealism organized by the French poet André Breton, the Austrian painter Wolfgang Paalen and the Peruvian poet César Moro was inaugurated at the Galería de Arte Mexicano in Mexico City. The Surrealist exhibition marked the beginning of an international interest in the artistic activities in Mexico. The collection helped to change the archetypes of a nationalist Mexico, a country able to assimilate any foreign movement. Presenting a dialogue between productions from distinct periods and latitudes, this exhibition for the first time overlapped the pre-Hispanic past and modern art, including primitive wooden totems that refer to ancient myths. World War II made it so that Mexico was attributed as a land of peace and freedom. The exhibition included Surrealists living in Europe and also some exiles like Antonio Rodríguez Luna, Miguel Prieto, Remedios Varo and Leonora Carrington. The image that the exiles conceived of Mexico was clearly idealized as a surreal, unlikely, exotic country – a paradise regained. Among Mexican artists in the movement were Agustín Lazo and Juan Soriano. André Breton sent works from Paris to form an international chapter and, along with Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, participated in the surrealist movement until Breton gave his endorsement to integrate Mexicans into international surrealism. Stairs with no defined destination, fantastic images, fragments of bodies and plants growing in the air are some of the elements that appear in these compositions that transcend reality. María Izquierdo’s Autorretrato y sueño (Self-portrait and dream) includes cut trees, characters running and a self-portrait holding a head whose hair is entangled to form tree trunks coming out of the window of a house, all of which come together to form a composition with a strange vanishing point perspective. Meanwhile, Leonora Carrington’s drawing represents an anthropomorphic boat in which a female fish is mixed with the ship’s structure, part of her personal mythology. Mexican surrealism represented a breaking point with the nationalist figurative art and marked a new direction of Mexican painting. AUTORRETRATO Y SUEÑO (SELF-PORTRAIT AND DREAM) María Izquierdo 1947 Medium: Ink on paper Measurements: 47.5 x 63.5 cm Section: Dreams, imagination, and fantasy 4. ABSTRACTION AND DECONSTRUCTION In the early twentieth century, the European avant-garde began to dismantle the pictorial space and analyze it as a flat two-dimensional surface in which compositions are articulated through colors, lines and forms, separate from external references and without political pretensions. The artists fought for the autonomy of art and its universality. Abstract art, highlighted in Soviet Supremacy and Parisian cubism, is liberated from the figure to explore color and line. Because many Mexican artists traveled to the Old Continent and lived with the European avant-garde they made an important mark on the national artistic identity after returning to Mexico. They also joined the exiles who fled Europe’s wars, thereby enriching the Mexican art scene. Mexicanity was often seen as folk and superficial, made for tourists. The art historian Luis Cardoza y Aragón defined the art of the muralists in his famous phrase: “The folk painting of Mexico is not Mexican because it is not painting [...] The artist who in Mexico seeks the essential thing is for a certain medium an outcast; for that medium if there is no sarape and nopal, there is no art in Mexico.”10 In reaction to the Mexican School of Painting, the pre-Hispanic past was considered an authentic and original Latin American art that conveyed the essence of Mexico and used the same abstract language of modernism. The artists used geometrism to create an international abstract painting style with Mexican coloring and distanced themselves from the ideological and politicized nationalist language to find an expression beyond the “cactus curtain,” a term used by José Luis Cuevas to express the need for artists to move away from Mexican revolutionary imagery. Gunther Gerzso, Juan Soriano, Manuel Felguérez, Alberto Gironella, Vicente Rojo, Roger von Gunten, José Luis Cuevas, Francisco Toledo, Lilia Carillo, Enrique Echeverría, Helen Escobedo, Vlady and Fernando García Ponce were all artists who participated in a movement that has been called the “Ruptura.” According to Teresa del Conde, “young independents or those dissatisfied with the late fifties and late seventies did not feel bound by any dogma, nor did they proclaim themselves as the vanguard or elite, they simply expressed themselves differently, creating the impression that there was a rebounding wall, symbolized by the Mexican School.”11 10. “Ideas, frases y aforismos de Luis Cardoza y Aragón,” Revista de la Universidad, Mexico, summary, vol. XXXI, num. 7, March 1977, p. 7. 11. Teresa del Conde, A guided visit. A Brief History of Contemporary Mexican Art, Mexico, Plaza & Janes, p. 95. HACIA ARRIBA (UPWARD) Vicente Rojo 1966 Medium: Ink on paper Measurements: 40 x 30 cm Section: Abstraction and deconstruction COMPOSICIÓN (COMPOSITION) Manuel Felguérez 1967 Medium: Lithograph Measurements: 45 x 39.5 cm Section: Abstraction and deconstruction 5. PSYCHEDELIC AND OPTIC ART Psychedelic art emerged in the sixties as a result of the hippie counterculture and as an escape from the limits imposed on consciousness. The term “psychedelic” was coined by British psychologist Humphry Osmond in 1957, meaning “manifestation of the soul.” It is characterized by expression through psychotropic drugs, whose consumption causes an alteration in the perception of the senses. In the visual arts, radial shapes, spirals, repetitions, anti-gravitational expansions, fractal and kaleidoscopic patterns, extreme depth of detail, mutation of objects, as well as the creation of highly contrasting free and fantastic compositions pervade. In the General Motors Collection, we find outstanding examples of psychedelic art like Precisión (Precision) by Ricardo Regazzoni, Mi jardín (My garden) by Vlady and Paisaje (Landscape) by Carlos Cantú. Each of the compositions shows a personal way of accessing the subconscious universe. For its part, the Op Art or Optical Art emerged in the late fifties in the United States as a variation or interpretation of geometric abstraction. It uses scientific principles and repetitive structures to create certain optical effects and seeks to create sensations of movement. Op Art uses optical phenomena to produce abstract pictorial images and create sensations of movement in two-dimensional surfaces. La vida (Life) by Crispín Alcázar and Dos colores (Two colors) by Myra Landau are clear examples of the way in which artists experimented with optical phenomena to create a variety of effects. The GM de Mexico Collection of Drawings and Graphic Art offers a unique opportunity to appreciate the development of the arts in Mexico through the 1970s. The intelligent selection of works shows the company’s commitment to a project initiated by Richard Ehrlich and embraced not only by Thomas Cranfill, but also by a group of advisers whom both Ehrlich and Cranfill supported. The two characters were able to gauge the relevance of the artistic movements of Mexico, the country in which they lived, and express their admiration for the Mexican culture, evident in the dedication, time and effort they invested to bring together this group of artwork. The collection exhibits a little-known facet of the engagement of General Motors de Mexico with Mexican culture. The same can be seen in the division of thematic sections and the selection of artists and works, which were meticulously executed. The collection, without doubt, achieves a vast exploration of the rich aspects of 20th century Mexican art. DOS COLORES (TWO COLORS) Myra Landau 1965 Medium: Etching, 6/10 Measurements: 40 x 27 cm Section: Psychedelic and optic art PRECISIÓN (PRECISION) Ricardo Regazzoni 1968 Medium: Ink on paper Measurements: 15.5 x 22.5 cm Section: Psychedelic and optic art LIST OF WORKS LA DEFENSA DEL HONOR | José Guadalupe Posada EL ABRAZO | Emilio Amero LA BORRACHA | José Clemente Orozco AMIGOS | Philip F. Bragar NUESTRA IMAGEN ACTUAL | David Alfaro Siqueiros JUCHITECA SENTADA | Celia Calderón de la Barca EL DICTADOR | Juan O´Gorman AGUADORA MAYA | Olga Costa EL SOLDADO | Luis Arenal Bastar MUJERES Y NIÑO | Francisco Zúñiga LA LIBERTAD | José Reyes Meza FIGURAS HERÓICAS | Ricardo Martínez De Hoyos PRISIONEROS | Francisco Moreno Capdevila DOLIENTES | Raúl Anguiano Y CON LA CARREOLA SOMOS TRES | Milo Needles LA SOMBRA | Carlos Orozco Romero NIÑO FLOTANDO | Lucas Johnson MUJER | Enrique Carbajal González “Sebastián” COSCOMATES | Leopoldo Méndez MUJER ASOLEÁNDOSE | Leonel Góngora POR UNA CAUSA, O POR OTRA | Guillermo Barclay REMEDIOS LA BELLA | Roger Von Gunten HOMBRES LEVANTANDO UNA CHOZA | Ángel Bracho REMINISCENCIA NO. 4 | Roberto Donis RÍO PALIZADA | Alfredo Zalce JUANITO PELLOYO | Pedro Preux COCINANDO CHICLE | Adolfo Quinteros CIERVO | Héctor Xavier PEÓN DE ALBAÑIL | Pablo O´Higgins ESTABLO | Mariano Paredes CAMPESINOS | Xavier Guerrero EL LEOPARDO | Vita Giorgi LAVANDO | Francisco Dosamantes EL REY DE LA MONTAÑA | Emilio Ortiz Sosa TRAPICHE PRIMITIVO | Alberto Beltrán LA ESPERA (GATO) | Alice Rahon CARNAVAL DE HUEJOTZINGO | Diego Rivera ELEFANTITO | Martha Adams LOS JUDAS | Oscar Frías POPOCATÉPETL | Dr. Atl CABALLITO MÁGICO | José Chávez Morado LA POZA, TEPOZTLÁN | Angelina Berloff CARRERA DE OBSTÁCULOS | Marta Palau MAGUEY | Carlos Alvarado Lang ALEGORÍA | Brian Nissen ÁRBOL DE LA NOCHE TRISTE | Jorge Tovar Santana EL VIOLONCELLO | Gabriel Fernández Ledesma PIÑANONA | Robert Maxwell DAMA CON CELLO | Sergio Moyano ESPORAS | Gildardo Uribe REDONDEL | Mario Reyes EXTRAÑO CARGAMENTO | Vita Castro EL TORITO | Antonio Trejo Osorio PERSONAJE | Fernando Castro Pacheco CABEZA DE LUNA | Rufino Tamayo FAUNO | José García Ocejo ELLA Y LAS FLORES | Fernando Ramos Prida PIRÁMIDES Y SERPIENTES | Manuel González Serrano HOMBRE LLORANDO | Helen Bickham FIGURAS ALADAS | Juan Soriano MUJER TRISTE | Raúl Tovar BESTIARIO | José Luis Cuevas NIÑO NEGRO | Elizabeth Catlett ROSTROS | Jacobo Glantz CABEZA DE HARLEM | Miguel Covarrubias EL REY Y LA REINA | Antonio Rodríguez Luna RETRATO DE NIÑA | Roberto Berdecio NIÑA BOGUIE | Francisco Corzas VIEJA CON MOÑO | Rafael Coronel MUJER EN LA NOCHE | Humberto Kubli INFANTA DE VELÁZQUEZ | Alberto Gironella HOMBRE Y MUJER | Gilberto Aceves Navarro LA BODA | Juan Manuel de la Rosa PESCADOR CON CARNADA | Francisco Toledo AUTORRETRATO Y SUEÑO | María Izquierdo CIMENTARE | Leonora Carrington BÚHO PESCADOR | Mario Rangel Sánchez LA TELEVISIÓN, CON UN PERSONAJE | Crescencio Víctor Estrada G. COMPOSICIÓN | Carlos Mérida STUPA NO. 2 | Kasuya Sakai HACIA ARRIBA | Vicente Rojo DISEÑO PARA UNA ESCULTURA | Olivier Seguín ESTUDIO PARA UNA ESCULTURA | Helen Escobedo LA CATEDRAL | Enrique Climent DIBUJO ABSTRACTO | Enrique Echeverría DIBUJO ABSTRACTO | Gabriel Ramírez COMPOSICIÓN | Ricardo Rocha COMPOSICIÓN | Lilia Carrillo COMPOSICIÓN | Manuel Felguérez ABSTRACCIÓN | Rodolfo Nieto Labastida HOMENAJE A ALBERTO GIACOMETTI | Álvar Carrillo-Gil SOBRE LA MESA | Liliana Porter LABERINTO | Xavier Esqueda NACIMIENTO A UN NUEVO MUNDO | Luis Ponce DOS COLORES | Myra Landau PRECISIÓN | Ricardo Regazzoni LA VIDA | Crispín Alcázar Partida MI JARDÍN | Vladimir (Vlady) Kibalchich Rusakov PAISAJE | Carlos Cantú TONDO NO.1: ESTUDIO PARA UN AMBIENTE-ESCULTURA CON LUCES | Arnold Belkin GENERAL MOTORS DE MEXICO S. DE. R.L. DE C.V. The total or partial reproduction of this work, by any means, is forbidden without express permission from the right holders.