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In the years following the bloodshed and turmoil of the 10-year Mexican Revolution, which ended in 1920, Mexican art flourished. "Artists sought to develop a creative language that could convey the… ...
The Mexican Revolution created the famous mural movement -- but also so much more. Join art critic Christopher Knight for an exhibition tour.
An engrossing exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, “Paint the Revolution: Mexican Modernism, 1910-1950,” includes an ample cross section of Rivera’s work and several iconic pieces ...
Mexican prints 1910-1960 will be shown at the British Museum in London through April 5, 2010.. The current exhibition at the British Museum of Mexican printmaking in the early 20th century is the ...
"Paint the Revolution: Mexican Modernism, 1910-1950'' is on view through January 6. Dorrance Galleries, Main Building, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia.
The most comprehensive exhibition of Mexican Modernism in 7 decades is now on display at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and for visitors, it is an exclusive opportunity.
When the Mexican government was overthrown in 1910, a revolution started — in society and in art. The four following decades saw a rising group of Mexican artists asserting themselves as world ...
The 1920s-era Mexican Secretary of Public Education indirectly shaped L.A.'s role as "the mural capital of the world" and the city's large-scale New Deal-era civic commissions.
The Mexican Revolution of 1910, depicted in films and photos with Pancho Villa riding his ferocious horse Siete Leguas. Men and women with bullet belts criss-crossing their chests stood proudly for ...