News

“Detroit Industry Murals,” Diego Rivera The Syndicate’s criticism ... where he defended the Popular Front strategy during the Spanish Civil War. Stalin and the Spanish Communist Party ...
The Aztec outnumbered the Spanish, but that didn't ... Malinche and Cortés in murals depicting Mexican history painted by Diego Rivera, in Palacio Nacional, Mexico City. Photograph by ORONOZ ...
One of the most famous painters in the world, especially of Mexican descent, was Diego Rivera ... the Conquest, Porfirio Diaz's dictatorship, and the Mexican Revolution. The mural is set in ...
The quiet network of waterways, on the southern edge of Mexico’s hectic capital, was built by the Aztecs long before the Spanish ... his poetry. Diego Rivera worked them into a mural.
Spanish, English, and Russian titles fill out these dusty ... which she shared with her husband, Diego Rivera. Kahlo and Rivera shared La Casa Azul with Trotsky too, for a time. In 1937, the two ...
“It’s not love, or tenderness, or affection, it’s life itself, my life, that I found when I saw it in your hands,” wrote Frida Kahlo to Diego ... Rivera was painting the mural La Creación ...
The Museo Mural Diego ... of the Conquest. The exhibition runs from October 24, 2024, to February 16, 2025, and includes notable works by artists such as Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco ...
He drew his subject matter from Aztec, Mayan and Toltec mythology, the history of the Spanish conquest and the 1910 ... The others: Diego Rivera, who died in 1951, and David Siqueiros, now 68 ...
The love story between iconic artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera will take center stage in Opera Omaha’s first Spanish language ... large-scale murals. Maza said she was immediately drawn ...
Encores Thursdays, Nov. 23 - Dec. 14 at 8 p.m. on KPBS TV The Spanish Conquest laid the ground ... muralism developed by artists such as Diego Rivera.
In 1947, Diego Rivera further immortalized ... “Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park.” The mural portrays Mexican history from the Spanish conquest to the Mexican Revolution.
In 1947, Diego Rivera further immortalized ... “Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park.” The mural portrays Mexican history from the Spanish conquest to the Mexican Revolution.