Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
David Alfaro Siqueiros
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{Short description|Mexican social realist painter (1896–1974)}} {{family name hatnote|[[Alfaro (surname)|Alfaro]]|[[Siqueiros]]|lang=Spanish}} {{Infobox artist | name = David Alfaro Siqueiros | image = David-Alfaro-Siqueiros.png | imagesize = | caption = Siqueiros, year unknown | birth_name = José de Jesús Alfaro Siqueiros | birth_date = {{birth date|1896|12|29|mf=y}} | birth_place = [[Chihuahua City]], [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]], Mexico | death_date = {{death date and age|1974|1|6|1896|12|29|mf=y}} | death_place = [[Cuernavaca]], [[Morelos]], Mexico | field = [[Painting]], [[Muralist]] | training = San Carlos Academy | movement = [[Mexican Muralism|Mexican Mural Movement]], [[Social Realism]] | works = ''Portrait of the Bourgeoisie'' (1939–1940), ''The March of Humanity'' (1957–1971) | patrons = | awards = [[Lenin Peace Prize]] 1966 }} '''David Alfaro Siqueiros''' (born '''José de Jesús Alfaro Siqueiros'''; December 29, 1896 – January 6, 1974) was a Mexican [[social realist]] painter, best known for his large public murals using the latest in equipment, materials and technique. Along with [[Diego Rivera]] and [[José Clemente Orozco]], he was one of the most famous of the "[[Mexican muralists]]".<ref>{{cite web|title=Siqueiros Paintings, Bio, Ideas|url=https://www.theartstory.org/artist/siqueiros-david-alfaro/|access-date=2019-10-18|website=The Art Story}}</ref> Siqueiros was a member of the [[Mexican Communist Party]]. Although he went to [[Spain]] to support the [[Second Spanish Republic|Spanish Republic]] against the forces of [[Francisco Franco]] with his art, he volunteered and served in frontline combat as a Lieutenant Colonel in the [[Spanish Republican Army|Army of the Republic]] through 1938 before returning to Mexico City.<ref>[https://www.theartstory.org/artist/siqueiros-david-alfaro/life-and-legacy/ The art story, life and legacy]</ref> In 1940, he led a [[Leon Trotsky#Assassination|failed assassination attempt on Leon Trotsky]] in which Trotsky's 14-year-old grandson was shot and American communist [[Robert Sheldon Harte]] was executed.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Tony |date=2020-06-17 |title=The artist as activist: David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974) |url=https://www.mexconnect.com/articles/309-the-artist-as-activist-david-alfaro-siqueiros-1896-1974/ |access-date=2023-06-01 |website=MexConnect |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> After spending several months on the run from Mexican authorities disguised as a peasant, Siqueiros was eventually apprehended in [[Jalisco]], although he would never be brought to trial and was freed shortly.<ref name="Cabrera Nuñez" /> By accordance with [[Spanish naming customs]], his surname would normally have been ''Alfaro''; however, like [[Pablo Picasso|Picasso (Pablo Ruiz y Picasso)]] and [[Federico García Lorca|Lorca (Federico García Lorca)]], Siqueiros used his mother's surname. It was long believed that he was born in [[Camargo, Chihuahua|Camargo]] in [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua state]], but in 2003 it was proven that he was born in the city of Chihuahua after the discovery of his birth certificate, but grew up in [[Irapuato]], [[Guanajuato (state)|Guanajuato]], at least from the age of six. According to Victor Mendoza Magallanes, he was born in Santa Rosalia in modern-day Camargo, Chihuahua. One source says that the discovery of his birth certificate in 2003 was {{Clarify|date=January 2025|text=by a Mexican art curator the following year by art critic Raquel Tibol,}} who was renowned as the leading authority on Mexican Muralism{{sfn|Conaculta|2011}} and who had been a close acquaintance of Siqueiros,{{sfn|''Proceso''|2004}} although there hasn't been any evidence to prove this. Siqueiros changed his given name to "David" after his first wife called him by it in allusion to [[Michelangelo]]'s ''[[David (Michelangelo)|David]]''.{{sfn|''Proceso''|2004}}{{sfn|''Gente Sur''|2005}} ==Early life== Many details of Siqueiros's childhood, including birth date, birthplace, first name and where he grew up, were misstated during his life and long after his death, in some cases by himself. Multiple sources have stated he was born in Santa Rosalia in modern day [[Camargo, Chihuahua]] and [[Mexico City]], but it has been confirmed in 2003 he was born in the [[Chihuahua City]] with the discovery of his birth certificate. Siqueiros was born in 1896, the second of three children. He was baptized José de Jesús Alfaro Siqueiros.{{sfn|''Proceso''|2004}}{{sfn|''Gente Sur''|2005}} His father, Cipriano Alfaro, originally from [[Irapuato]], was well-off. His mother was Teresa Siqueiros. Siqueiros had two siblings: a sister, Luz, three years elder, and a brother "Chucho" (Jesús), a year younger. David's mother died when he was four and their father sent the children to live with their paternal grandparents.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=14–16}} David's grandfather, nicknamed "Siete Filos" ('seven knife-edges'), had an especially strong role in his upbringing. In 1902, Siqueiros started school in Irapuato, Guanajuato. He credits his first rebellious influence to his sister, who had resisted their father's religious orthodoxy. Around this time, Siqueiros was also exposed to new political ideas, mainly along the lines of [[anarcho-syndicalism]]. One such political theorist was [[Dr. Atl]], who published a manifesto in 1906 calling for Mexican artists to develop a national art and look to ancient indigenous cultures for inspiration.{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} In 1911, at the age of fifteen, Siqueiros was involved in a student strike at the [[Academy of San Carlos]] of the National Academy of Fine Arts that protested the school's teaching methodology and urged the impeachment of the school's director. Their protests eventually led to the establishment of an "open-air academy" in {{ill|Santa Anita Zacatlamanco|es|lt=Santa Anita}}.{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} [[File:Diego-rivera-en-Paris.jpg|thumb|right|225px|(From left to right, top to bottom) Leon Caillou, [[Diego Rivera]], David Alfaro Siqueiros, Magda Caillou, [[Angelina Beloff]], Graciela Amador in [[Paris]], 1920]] At the age of eighteen, Siqueiros and several of his colleagues from the School of Fine Arts joined [[Venustiano Carranza]]'s [[Constitutional Army]] fighting the government of President [[Victoriano Huerta]].{{citation needed|date=February 2020}} When Huerta fell in 1914, Siqueiros became enmeshed in the "post-revolutionary" infighting, as the Constitutional Army battled the diverse political factions of [[Pancho Villa]] and [[Emiliano Zapata]] for control.{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} His military travels around the country exposed him to Mexican culture and the raw, everyday struggles of the working and rural poor classes. After Carranza's forces had gained control, Siqueiros briefly returned to Mexico City to paint before traveling to Europe in 1919. First in Paris, he absorbed the influence of [[cubism]], intrigued particularly with [[Paul Cézanne]] and the use of large blocks of intense color. While there, he also met [[Diego Rivera]], another Mexican painter of "the Big Three" on the brink of a legendary career in muralism, and he traveled to Italy to study the great fresco painters of the Renaissance.{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} In Barcelona he published a magazine, La vida Americana, in which he issued a manifesto to the artists of America to reject the decadent influence of Europe and create a new form of public art with the latest tools and technology. ==Early art and politics== Although many have said that Siqueiros' artistic ventures were frequently "interrupted" by political ones, Siqueiros himself believed the two were intricately intertwined.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.moma.org/collection/object.php?object_id=79146 |title=David Alfaro Siqueiros / Collective Suicide / 1936 |publisher=MoMA |access-date=11 November 2014}}</ref> By 1921, when he wrote his manifesto in ''Vida Americana'', Siqueiros had already been exposed to [[Marxism]] and seen the life of the working and rural poor while traveling with the Constitutional Army. In "A New Direction for the New Generation of American Painters and Sculptors", he called for a "spiritual renewal" to simultaneously bring back the virtues of classical painting while infusing this style with "new values" that acknowledged the "modern machine" and the "contemporary aspects of daily life".{{sfn|Calles|1975|p=21}} The manifesto also claimed that a "constructive spirit" is essential to meaningful art, which rises above mere decoration or false, fantastical themes. Through this style, Siqueiros hoped to create a style that would bridge national and universal art. In his work, as well as his writing, Siqueiros sought a social realism that hailed the proletariat peoples of Mexico and the world, even as it attempted to avoid the widespread clichés of "Primitivism" and "Indianism".{{sfn|Calles|1975|}} [[Image:Mural David Alfaro Siqueiros en el Tecpan Tlatelolco.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Mural by David Alfaro Siqueiros in Tecpan, c. 1944]] In 1922, Siqueiros returned to Mexico City to work as a muralist for [[Álvaro Obregón]]'s revolutionary government. The then Secretary of Public Education, [[José Vasconcelos]], made a mission of educating the masses through public art, and hired scores of artists and writers to build a modern Mexican culture. Siqueiros, Rivera and Orozco worked together under Vasconcelos, who supported the muralist movement by commissioning murals for prominent buildings in Mexico City. Still, the artists working at the Preparatoria realized that many of their early works lacked the "public" nature envisioned in their ideology. In 1923 Siqueiros helped found the Syndicate of Revolutionary Mexican Painters, Sculptors and Engravers, which addressed the problem of public access to art through its paper, ''El Machete''. That year Siqueiros helped author a manifesto in the newspaper "for the proletariat of the world". It addressed the necessity of "collective" art, which would serve as "ideological propaganda" to educate the masses and overcome bourgeois, individualist art. [[File:Siquieros painting 1925.png|thumb|left|300px|Siqueiros painting a mural circa 1925]] Soon after, Siqueiros painted his famous mural ''Burial of a Worker'' (1923) in the stairwell of the Colegio Chico. The fresco features a group of pre-Conquest style workers in a funeral procession that are carrying a giant coffin, decorated with a hammer and sickle.<ref name="Hurlburt">Laurance P. Hurlburt, The Mexican Muralists in the United States (Albuquerque, N.M.: [[University of New Mexico Press]], 1989), 203.</ref> The mural was never finished and was vandalized by students at the school who did not agree with the work's overtly political subject matter. Eventually, the entire mural was whitewashed by the new Minister of Education who succeeded Vasconcelos.<ref>{{cite book |title=Idols Behind Altars |last=Brenner |first=Anita |publisher= Payson & Clark Ltd. |year=1929 |location=New York |pages=244–59}}</ref> The Syndicate became ever more critical of the revolutionary government, due to the State's failure to deliver on promised reforms. As a result, its members faced new threats to cut funding for their art and the newspaper. A feud within the Syndicate—regarding a choice between publishing ''El Machete'' or losing financial support for mural projects—led to Siqueiros moving to the forefront of the organization, when Rivera left in protest over the decision to prioritize politics over art. Despite being dismissed from a post at the Department of Education in 1925, Siqueiros remained deeply involved in labor activities, in the Syndicate as well as the Mexican Communist Party, until he was jailed and eventually exiled in the early 1930s.{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} [[File:Tropical Amèrica .jpg|thumb|left|250px|Tropical America]] After spending many years in Mexico and being heavily involved in radical political activities, Siqueiros went to Los Angeles, California in 1932 to continue his career as a muralist. Working in a collective unit that experimented with new painting techniques using modern devices such as airbrushes, spray guns and projectors,<ref name="White2009">{{cite book |author=D. Anthony White |title=Siqueiros: Biography of a Revolutionary Artist |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bx0oAQAAIAAJ |year= 2009 |publisher=Booksurge |isbn=978-1-4392-1172-4 |page=145}}</ref> Siqueiros and his team of collaborators painted two major murals. The first, entitled ''Street Meeting'', was commissioned for the [[Chouinard Art Institute|Chouinard School of Art]]. It depicts a group of workers of mixed ethnicities listening to an angry labor agitator's speech during a break in the workday.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Mexican Muralists in the United States |last=Hurlburt |first=Laurance |publisher=University of New Mexico Press |year=1989 |isbn=0826311342 |location=Albuquerque, NM |pages=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780826312457/page/210 210–13] |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780826312457/page/210}}</ref> The mural was washed over within a year of its unveiling{{snd}}due to weather-related issues, and perhaps the Communist content of the work. Siqueiros' other significant Los Angeles mural, ''[[América Tropical: Oprimida y Destrozada por los Imperialismos|Tropical America]]'' (full name: ''[[América Tropical: Oprimida y Destrozada por los Imperialismos]]'', or ''Tropical America: Oppressed and Destroyed by Imperialism''),<ref>Del Barco, Mandalit. [https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130519329 Revolutionary Mural To Return To L.A. After 80 Years.] npr. October 26, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2015.</ref> was commissioned shortly after the unveiling of ''Street Meeting'', and was to be painted on the exterior wall of the Plaza Art Center that faced the busy [[Olvera Street]]. ''Tropical America'' depicts [[American imperialism]] in Latin America, a much more radical theme than was intended for the work. Although it received generally favorable criticism, some viewed it as Communist propaganda, which led to a partial covering in 1934 and a total whitewash in 1938.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Mexican Muralists in the United States |last=Hurlburt |first=Laurance |publisher=University of New Mexico Press |year=1989 |isbn=0826311342 |location=Albuquerque, NM |pages=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780826312457/page/213 213] |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780826312457/page/213}}</ref> Eighty years later, the [[Getty Conservation Institute]] performed restoration work on the mural.<ref>[http://www.getty.edu/conservation/our_projects/field_projects/siqueiros/siqueiros_interpret.html "Conservation of América Tropical"] ''The Getty Conservation Institute website'' Accessed 14 November 2014</ref> As no color photographs of ''Tropical America'' are known to exist, conservators used scientific analysis and best practices to get at the artist's vision of the mural. It became accessible to the public on its 80th anniversary, October 9, 2012.<ref>Whalen, Timothy P. (October 9, 2012) [http://blogs.getty.edu/iris/america-tropical-is-reborn-on-80th-birthday/ "América Tropical Is Reborn on 80th Birthday"] ''The Getty Iris'' The J. Paul Getty Trust</ref> The América Tropical Interpretive Center that opened nearby is dedicated to the life and legacy of David Alfaro Siqueiros.<ref>[http://www.americatropical.org/ América Tropical Interpretive Center] Official website</ref><ref name=forgotten/> ==Artistic career== [[Image:Foto al mural del polyforum0002.jpg|right|225px|thumb|''La Marcha de la Humanidad'']] [[File:Siquieros mella.png|thumb|left|225px|Siqueiros (third from right) along with others during a tribute to [[Julio Antonio Mella]] circa 1930]] In the early 1930s, including his time spent in [[Palacio de Lecumberri|Lecumberri Prison]], Siqueiros produced a series of politically themed lithographs, many of which were exhibited in the United States. His lithograph ''Head'' was shown at the 1930 exhibition "Mexican Artists and Artists of the Mexican School" at The Delphic Studios in New York City.<ref name="New York Times">Ruth Green Harris, "Art That Is Now Being Shown In the Galleries," ''[[The New York Times]]'', December 7, 1930.</ref> In 1932, he led an exhibition and conference entitled "Rectifications on Mexican Muralism" at the gallery of the Spanish Casino in [[Taxco, Guerrero]].{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} Shortly after, he traveled to New York, where he participated in the Weyhe Gallery's "Mexican Graphic Art" exhibition. Also in 1932, [[Nelbert Chouinard]] invited Siqueiros to Los Angeles to conduct mural workshops.<ref>{{cite book |title=On the edge of America: California Modernist Art 1900–1950 |last=Karlstrom |first=Paul J. |publisher=[[University of California Press]] |year=1996 |location=Berkeley, Los Angeles, Oxford |pages=130}}</ref> It was at this time that, with a team of students, he also completed ''Tropical America'' in 1932, at the Italian Hall at Olvera Street in Los Angeles.{{sfn|Lucie-Smith|2004|p=63}} Painting fresco on an outside wall – visible to passersby as well as intentional viewers – forced Siqueiros to reconsider his methodology as a muralist. He wanted the image – an Indian peon being crucified by American oppression – to be accessible from multiple angles. Instead of just constructing "an enlarged easel painting", he realized that the mural "must conform to the normal transit of a spectator."{{sfn|Calles|1975|}} Eventually, Siqueiros would develop a mural technique that involved tracing figures onto a wall with an electric projector, photographing early wall sketches to improve perspective, and new paints, spray guns, and other tools to accommodate the surface of modern buildings and the outdoor conditions. He was unceremoniously deported from the United States for political activity the same year.<ref>Langa, Helena. ''Radical Art: Printmaking and the Left in 1930s New York''. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 2004. {{ISBN|978-0-520-23155-9}}. p. 234.</ref> [[File:Palacio de Bellas Artes - Mural La Nueva Democracia Siqueiros 2.jpg|thumb|left|250px|''La nueva democracia'' ("The New Democracy"), 1945, Siqueiros]] Back in New York in 1936, he was the guest of honor at the "Contemporary Arts" exhibition at the St. Regis gallery. There he also ran a political art workshop in preparation for the 1936 General Strike for Peace and [[May Day]] parade. The young [[Jackson Pollock]] attended the workshop and helped build floats for the parade. In fact, Siquieros has been credited with teaching drip and pour techniques to Pollock that later resulted in his [[all-over painting]]s, made from 1947 to 1950, and which constitute Pollock's greatest achievement. In addition to floats, the Siqueiros Experimental Workshop produced a variety of posters and other ephemeral works for the CPUSA and other anti-fascist organizations in New York. These ephemeral works possessed the ability to reach the masses in a way different from mural painting because they were accessible to a wide audience outside of an institution or gallery. The Siqueiros Experimental Workshop only lasted for a little over a year until Siqueiros went to fight in the Spanish Civil War in April 1937, but their floats were featured in both the 1936 and 1937 May Day Parades in Manhattan's garment district.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Hurlburt|first=Laurance|title=The Siqueiros Experimental Workshop: New York, 1936|journal=Art Journal|year=1976|volume=35|issue=3|pages=237–46|jstor=775942|doi=10.1080/00043249.1976.10793284}}</ref> Continuing to produce several works throughout the late 1930s – such as ''Echo of a Scream'' (1937) and ''The Sob'' (1939), both now at the Museum of Modern Art in New York . Although he went to Spain to support the Spanish Republic against the fascist forces of Francisco Franco with his art, he volunteered and served in frontline combat as a Lieutenant Colonel in the Army of the Republic through 1938 before returning to Mexico City. After his return, in a stairwell of the ''Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas'', Siqueiros collaborated with Spanish refugee Josep Renau and the International Team of Plastic Artists to develop one of his most famous works, ''Portrait of the Bourgeoisie'', warning against the dual foes of capitalism and fascism.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Jolly|first=Jennifer|title=The Art of the Collective|journal=Oxford Art Journal|year=2009|volume=31|issue=1|pages=129–51|doi=10.1093/oxartj/kcn006}}</ref> The original mural, painted in the stairwell of the electrical worker's union, incorporated cameras, photomontage, spray guns, airbrushes, stencils and the latest paints. It shows a giant generator using the opposition of fascist and capitalist democracies to generate imperialism and war. An armed, brave-faced revolutionary, of unnamable class or ethnicity, confronts the machine, and a blue sky on the ceiling flanked by electrical towers displays hope for the proletariat in technological and industrial advances. American-born poet and eventual fellow Spanish Civil War participant [[Edwin Rolfe]] was a great admirer of Siqueiros's "ability to function" as "artist and revolutionary".<ref name="Rolfe, Edwin 1995. p. 146">Rolfe, Edwin, Cary Nelson, and Jefferson Hendricks. Trees Became Torches: Selected Poems. Urbana: [[University of Illinois Press]], 1995. p. 146</ref> His 1934 poem "Room with Revolutionists" is based on a conversation between ″New Masses″ editor, poet, and Left journalist Joseph Freeman (1897–1965) and Siqueiros;<ref name="Rolfe, Edwin 1995. p. 146"/> in it, Siqueiros is described as "a revolutionist / a painter of great areas, editor / of fiery and terrifying words, leader / of the poor who plant, the poor who burrow / under the earth in field and mine. / His life's an always upward-delving battle in / an old torn sweater, the pockets always empty."<ref>Rolfe, Edwin, Cary Nelson, and Jefferson Hendricks. ''Trees Became Torches: Selected Poems''. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1995. p. 85</ref> ==Attempted assassination of Leon Trotsky== Before the mural's completion in 1940, however, Siqueiros was forced into hiding and later exiled for his direct involvement in an attempt to assassinate [[Leon Trotsky]], then in exile in Mexico City from the Soviet Union:{{sfn|Stein|1994|p=}} President [[Lázaro Cárdenas]] had given Leon Trotsky and his wife, Natalia Sedova, political asylum after fleeing Stalinist persecution. They were able to enter the country thanks to the request that Ana Brenner made to Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo to intervene on their behalf. Trotsky's arrival in Mexico as a political asylee infuriated the [[Republican faction (Spanish Civil War)|Spanish Republicans]], allies of the Soviet Union, who complained to the Mexican fighters--among them Siqueiros--about their government's decision to accept Trotsky.<ref name="Cabrera Nuñez">{{cite book |last1=Cabrera Nuñez |first1=Eduardo César |last2=Valentina de Santiago Lázaro |first2=María |title=Siqueiros. Cronología biográfica. |date=2007 |publisher=Ayuntamiento de Guanajuato}}</ref> [[File:Siquieros-hostotipaquillo.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Siqueiros disguised as a farmer under the name of Macario Huízar in the [[Hostotipaquillo]] sierra, October 1940]] {{blockquote|text=In the early morning of May 24, 1940, [Siqueiros] led an attack on [[Leon Trotsky Museum, Mexico City|Trotsky's house in Mexico City's Coyoacán suburb]]. The attacking party was composed of men who had served under Siqueiros in the Spanish Civil War and of miners from his union. After thoroughly raking the house with machine gun fire and explosives, the attackers withdrew in the belief that nobody could have survived the assault. They were mistaken. Trotsky was unhurt and lived till August, when he was killed with a pickaxe wielded by an assassin.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mexconnect.com/articles/309-the-artist-as-activist-david-alfaro-siqueiros-1896%E2%80%931974 |title=The artist as activist: David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896–1974) |publisher=Mexconnect.com |access-date=11 November 2014}}</ref>}} Trotsky's 14-year-old grandson was shot, yet survived.<ref name=":1">{{cite news |last1=Mike Lanchin |title=Trotsky's grandson recalls ice pick killing |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-19356256 |access-date=15 January 2019 |work=[[BBC News]] |date=28 August 2012 |language=en |quote=Volkov was hit in the foot}}</ref> Following the attack, police found a shallow grave<ref>{{cite journal |editor1-last=Ted Crawford |editor2-last=David Walters |title=The Murder of Robert Sheldon Harte |journal=Fourth International |date=May 1942 |volume=3 |issue=5 |pages=139–42 |url=https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/fi/vol03/no05/rourke.htm |access-date=15 January 2019 |quote=a month later, on June 25th, Bob's lime-covered body was found in a shallow grave}}</ref> on the road to the Desierto de los Leones with the body of New York Communist [[Robert Sheldon Harte]], executed<ref name=":0">{{cite web |title=Index and Concordance to Alexander Vassiliev's Notebooks and Soviet Cables Deciphered by the National Security Agency's Venona Project |url=https://www.wilsoncenter.org/sites/default/files/Vassiliev-Notebooks-and-Venona-Index-Concordance_update-2014-11-01.pdf |website=Wilson Center |publisher=[[Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars]] |access-date=15 January 2019 |pages=175–76 |date=1 November 2014 |quote=Harte left alive with the raiders but was found dead a few days later. |archive-date=15 January 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190115234354/https://www.wilsoncenter.org/sites/default/files/Vassiliev-Notebooks-and-Venona-Index-Concordance_update-2014-11-01.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> by one shot to the head. He had been one of Trotsky's bodyguards. The theory that Sheldon was a Soviet agent who had infiltrated Trotsky's entourage, aiding in Siqueiros' attack by allowing the hit squad to enter Trotsky's compound, was discounted by Trotsky and later historians.<ref>Robert Service. Trotsky: A Biography. Belknap Press. 2009. p. 485-488</ref> Siqueiros's colleague Josep Renau completed the SME mural, transforming the generator into a machine that converts the blood of workers into coins. Siqueiros was located by the police in a property supposedly rented by Angelica and Luis Arenal (Siqueiros's wife and brother-in-law respectively) in the outskirts of the capital. Siqueiros fled to Guadalajara, hiding in the house of his old friend [[:es:José Guadalupe Zuno|José Guadalupe Zuno]] and from there he moved to the mountain town of [[Hostotipaquillo]]. Together with Angélia Arenal, he hid disguised as a peasant under the name of Macario Huízar. The Jalisco police apprehended Siqueiros and he was taken back Mexico City. He was formally processed and declared prisoner in the Lecumberri Preventive Prison. Siqueiros was charged for attempted homicide, criminal association, improper use of uniform, usurpation of functions, breaking and entering, firing a firearm and robbery.<ref name="Cabrera Nuñez" /> Despite Siqueiros's participation in these events, he never stood trial and was given permission to leave the country to paint a mural in Chile, arranged by Chilean poet [[Pablo Neruda]]. In a school library in the town of Chillán, he organized a team of artists to paint a mural which combined the heroic figures of Mexico and Chile in "Death to the Invader." Hoping to revisit the United States and contribute to the struggle against fascism, he was denied entry and went to Cuba where he painted three murals, "Allegory of Racial Equality and Fraternity in Cuba," "New Day of the Democracies" and "Two Mountains of America, Marti and Lincoln." ==Later life and works== [[Image:SiqueirosMuralSanMiguel.JPG|thumb|250px|right|Unfinished 1940s mural painted by David Alfaro Siqueiros, in Escuela de Bellas Artes, a cultural center in San Miguel de Allende, Gto.]] In 1948, Siqueiros was invited to teach a course on mural painting at an art academy in San Miguel Allende. Although he was barred from the United States, most of the students were American GIs who were being paid to study under him. Practicing his idea of learning art by working with a master artist on a mural project, he planned a mural in a colonial building recognizing the legacy of Miguel Allende, one of Mexico's leaders of the struggle for independence. The mural was never completed, due to legal procedures against the owner of the art academy. Based on this experience, he later wrote a book titled ''Como se pinta un mural''. [[File:Siquerios rivera alt.jpg|thumb|Siqueiros (left), [[Dr. Atl]] (center), and [[Diego Rivera]] (right) in 1955]] Siqueiros participated in the first ever Mexican contingent at the XXV [[Venice Biennale]] exhibition with Orozco, Rivera and [[Rufino Tamayo|Tamayo]] in 1950, and he received the second prize for all exhibitors, which recognized the international status of Mexican art.<ref name="White">Siqueiros, Biography of a Revolutionary Artist, (Book Surge, 2009)</ref><ref name="Folgarait">Leonard Folgarait, So Far From Heaven: David Alfaro Siqueiros' The March of Humanity and Mexican Revolutionary Politics (New York: [[Cambridge University Press]], 1987), 36.</ref> Yet by the 1950s, Siqueiros returned to accepting commissions from what he considered a "progressive" Mexican state, rather than painting for galleries or private patrons.<ref name="Folgarait"/> He constructed an outdoor mural entitled ''The People to the University, the University to the People'' at the [[National Autonomous University of Mexico]] in [[Mexico City]] in 1952. It was a combination of mural painting, bas-relief sculpture and Italian mosaic. In 1957 he began work on {{convert|4500|sqft|m2|adj=on}} government commission for [[Chapultepec Castle]] in Mexico City; ''Del porfirismo a la Revolución'' was his biggest mural yet.<ref name="Folgarait"/> (The painting is known in English as ''From the Dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz to the Revolution'' or ''The Revolution Against the Porfirian Dictatorship''.) [[File:Tamiji Kitagawa and David Alfaro Siqueiros in 1955.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Siqueiros with [[Tamiji Kitagawa]] in 1955]] In the lobby of the Hospital de la Raza in Mexico City, he created a revolutionary multi-angular mural using new materials and techniques, ''For the Social Welfare of all Mexicans''. After painting ''Man the Master and Not the Slave of Technology'' on a concave aluminum panel in the lobby of the [[National Polytechnic Institute|Polytechnic Institute]], he painted ''The Apology for the Future Victory of Science over Cancer'' on panels that wrap around the lobby of the cancer center.<ref name="White"/> Yet near the end of the decade, his outspoken communist views alienated him from the government. Under pressure from the government, the National Actors' Association, which had commissioned a mural on the theater in Mexico suspended his work on ''The History of Theater in Mexico'' at the Jorge Negrete Theater and sued him for breach of contract in 1958.<ref name="Campbell">Bruce Campbell, Mexican Murals in Times of Crisis (Tucson, Ariz.: The University of Arizona Press, 2003), 54.</ref> [[Image:CU-Mexico-rectoria-1.jpg|left|thumb|300px|David Siqueiros mural: ''El pueblo a la universidad, la universidad al pueblo'', [[National Autonomous University of Mexico]], 1952–1956]] [[File:David Alfaro Siqueiros (El Coronelazo).jpg|thumb|250px|Siqueiros by [[Héctor García Cobo]] at Lecumberri prison, Mexico City, 1960]] Siqueiros was eventually arrested in 1960 for openly criticizing the President of Mexico, [[Adolfo López Mateos]], and leading protests against the arrests of striking workers and teachers, though the charges were commonly known to be false.<ref name="White"/> Numerous protests ensued, even including an appeal advertisement by well-known artists and writers in ''[[The New York Times]]'' in 1961.<ref name="New York Times ad">"Siqueiros" (advertisement), ''The New York Times'', August 9, 1961.</ref> Unjustly imprisoned, Siqueiros continued to paint, and his works continued to sell.<ref name="Folgarait"/> During that stay, he would make numerous sketches for the project of decorating the [[Hotel Casino de la Selva]], owned by Manuel Suarez y Suarez. After international pressure was put on the Mexican authorities, Siqueiros was finally pardoned and released in the spring of 1964. He immediately resumed working on his suspended murals in the Actors' Union and Chapultepec Castle. When the mural planned for the Hotel de la Selva in [[Cuernavaca]] was moved to Mexico City and expanded, he assembled a team of national and international artists to work on the panels in his workshop in Cuernavaca.<ref name="White"/> This project, his last major mural, is the largest mural ever painted, an integrated structure combining architecture, in which the building was designed as a mural, with mural painting and polychromed sculpture. Known as the [[Polyforum Cultural Siqueiros|Polyforum Siqueiros]], the exterior consists of 12 panels of sculpture and painting while the walls and ceiling of the interior are covered with ''The March of Humanity on Earth and Toward the Cosmos''.<ref name="White"/> Completed in 1971 after years of extension and delay, the mural broke from some previous stylistic mandates, if only by its complex message. Known for making art that was easily read by the public, especially the lower classes, Siqueiros' message in ''The March'' is more difficult to decipher, though it seems to fuse two visions of human progress, one international and one based in Mexican heritage.<ref name="Folgarait"/> The mural's placement at a ritzy hotel and commission by its millionaire owner also seems to challenge Siqueiros' anti-capitalist ideology.<ref name="Folgarait"/> == Global policy == He was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting a [[world constitution]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Letters from Thane Read asking Helen Keller to sign the World Constitution for world peace. 1961 |url=https://www.afb.org/HelenKellerArchive?a=d&d=A-HK01-07-B149-F04-022.1.8 |access-date=2023-07-01 |website=Helen Keller Archive |publisher=American Foundation for the Blind}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Letter from World Constitution Coordinating Committee to Helen, enclosing current materials |url=https://www.afb.org/HelenKellerArchive?a=d&d=A-HK01-07-B154-F05-028.1.6 |access-date=2023-07-03 |website=Helen Keller Archive |publisher=American Foundation for the Blind}}</ref> As a result, for the first time in human history, a [[World Constituent Assembly]] convened to draft and adopt a [[Constitution for the Federation of Earth]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Preparing earth constitution {{!}} Global Strategies & Solutions {{!}} The Encyclopedia of World Problems |url=http://encyclopedia.uia.org/en/strategy/193465 |url-status=dead |access-date=2023-07-15 |website=The Encyclopedia of World Problems {{!}} Union of International Associations (UIA) |archive-date=2023-07-19 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230719215501/http://encyclopedia.uia.org/en/strategy/193465 }}</ref> == Death == Siqueiros died in Cuernavaca, Morelos, on January 6, 1974, in the company of Angélica Arenal Bastar, who had been his partner since the Spanish civil war. His remains were interred at the [[Panteón de Dolores#Rotonda de las Personas Ilustres|Rotunda of Illustrious Persons]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://rotonda.segob.gob.mx/work/models/Rotonda/Resource/contenidos/P1t.html |title=Rotonda de las personas ilustres |website=rotonda.segob.gob.mx |access-date=11 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111203123949/http://rotonda.segob.gob.mx/work/models/Rotonda/Resource/contenidos/P1t.html |archive-date=3 December 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref> A few days before his death, he donated his house in Polanco to the Mexican state; since 1969, it had been used for Public Art Rooms and a Museum of Mural Painting Composition. ==Style== [[File:PolyforumSiqueiros05.jpg|thumb|right|250px|View of the [[Polyforum Cultural Siqueiros]] in Mexico City]] [[Image:Suarez_y_siqueiros.JPG|thumb|right|250px|[[Manuel Suárez y Suárez]] and Siqueiros]] As a muralist and an artist, Siqueiros believed art should be public, educational, and ideological. He painted mostly murals and other portraits of the revolution – its goals, its past, and the current oppression of the working classes. Because he was painting a story of human struggle to overcome authoritarianism, capitalist rule, he painted the everyday people ideally involved in this struggle. Though his pieces sometimes include landscapes or figures of Mexican history and mythology, these elements often appear as mere accessories to the story of a revolutionary hero or heroes (several works depict the revolutionary "masses", such as the mural at Chapultepec).<ref name="Campbell2">Carolyn Hill, ed., ''Mexican Masters: Rivera, Orozco, and Siqueiros'' (Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 2005), 80.</ref> His interest in the human form developed at the Academy in Mexico City. His accentuation of the angles of the body, its muscles and joints, can be seen throughout his career in his portrayal of the strong revolutionary body. In addition, many works, especially in the 1930s, prominently feature hands, which could be interpreted as another heroic symbol of proletarian strength through work: his self-portrait in prison (''El Coronelazo'', 1945, Museum of Modern Art, Mexico City), ''Our Present Image'' (1947, Museum of Modern Art, Mexico), ''New Democracy'' (1944, Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City), and even his series on working class women, such as ''The Sob''. ==Gallery== <gallery> File:David Alfaro Siqueiros - Peasants - Google Art Project.jpg|''Peasants'' ({{circa}} 1913) File:Retrato de Carlos Orozco Romero, David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1918.jpg|''Portrait of Carlos Orozco Romero'', 1918 File:El señor del veneno, David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1918.jpg|''El señor del veneno'', 1918 Retrato de Amado de la Cueva.jpg|''Portrait of Amado de la Cueva'', 1920 File:Madre campesina, David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1924.jpg|''Madre campesina'', 1924 File:Zapata, David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1930.jpg|''Zapata'', 1930 File:Madre proletaria, David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1931.jpg|''Madre proletaria'', 1931 File:David Alfaro Siqueiros con otras personas en el Castillo de Chapultepec.jpg|David Alfaro Siqueiros with other people at the [[Chapultepec Castle]], 1960 File:DavidAlfaroSiqueirostombDoloresDF.JPG|Tomb of David Alfaro Siqueiros in [[Panteón de Dolores]] File:Manuel Suarez y Suarez.jpg|Escultura Don [[Manuel Suárez y Suárez|Manuel Suarez]] and Siqueiros </gallery> == Major exhibitions == * ''Siqueiros'', at Casino Español, Mexico City, 1932.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''70 Recent Works from David Alfaro Siqueiros'', at the Museo Nacional de Artes Plásticas, Mexico City, 1947.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Siqueiros'', at [[Galería de Arte Mexicano|Galeria de Arte Mexicano]], Mexico City, 1953.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Siqueiros: Retrospective Exhibition 1911–1967'', at the [[Museo Universitario de Ciencias y Artes|Museo Universitario de Ciencas y Arte]], Mexico City, 1967.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Siqueiros-Exposición Retrospectiva'', at the [[Tokyo National Museum]], Tokyo, 1972.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Siqueiros: Exposción de Homenaje'', at the [[Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura|Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes]], Mexico City, 1975.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Siqueiros-Visión, Tecnica y Estructural'', at the [[Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura|Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes]], Mexico City, 1984.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Images of Mexico'', at the [[Dallas Museum of Art]], Dallas, 1988.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Latin American Artists of the Twentieth Century'', at the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York, 1993.{{sfn|Stein|1994|pp=380–81}} * ''Vida Americana: Mexican Muralists Remake American Art 1925–1945'', at the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]], New York, 2020.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://whitney.org/exhibitions/vida-americana|title=Vida Americana: Mexican Muralists Remake American Art, 1925–1945 |website=whitney.org|language=en|access-date=2020-03-14}}</ref> ==See also== * [[Mexican muralism]] * [[Mexican art]] * [[Museo Cabeza de Juárez]] * [[La Tallera]] * [[List of people from Morelos, Mexico]] ==Selected other works== * ''Proletarian Mother'', 1929, Museum of Modern Art, Mexico * ''Zapata'' (lithograph), 1930, [[Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art]] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20100530061346/http://www.hirshhorn.si.edu/visit/collection_object.asp?key=32&subkey=12625 ''Zapata'' (oil painting)], 1931, [[Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden]], Smithsonian, Washington, D.C. * ''[[América Tropical: Oprimida y Destrozada por los Imperialismos|América Tropical]]'', 1932, Los Angeles<ref name=forgotten>{{cite news |url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laplaza/2010/09/america-tropical-mural-siquieros-los-angeles.html |title='America Tropical': A forgotten Siqueiros mural resurfaces in Los Angeles |work=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=September 22, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110206032526/http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laplaza/2010/09/america-tropical-mural-siquieros-los-angeles.html|archive-date=2011-02-06}}</ref> * [http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/49967.html ''War''], 1939, [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]] * ''José Clemente Orozco'', 1947, Carillo Gil Museum, Mexico City * ''Cain in the United States'', 1947, Carillo Gil Museum, Mexico city * ''For Complete Social Security of All Mexicans'', 1953–36, Hospital de La Raza, Mexico City ==Notes== {{reflist}} ==References== * {{cite book |title=David Alfaro Siqueiros, art and revolution |translator-first=Sylvia |translator-last=Calles |publisher=[[Lawrence & Wishart]] |location=London |year=1975 |ref={{sfnref|Calles|1975}}}} * {{cite web |url=http://www.conaculta.gob.mx/sala_prensa_detalle.php?id=10568 |title=David Alfaro Siqueiros, un artista cuya obra ha trascendido el tiempo y las fronteras |date=2011-01-06 |work=[[Conaculta]] (Government of Mexico, Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes) Press release no. 26 |language=es |ref={{sfnref|Conaculta|2011}}}} * {{cite journal |date=2005-10-15 |title=El verdadero Origen de Siqueiros; lo que hay de cierto tras el mito del ''Coronelazo'' |url=http://gentesur.com.mx/2005/10/bel_verdadero_origen_de_siqueiros_lo_que_hay_de_cierto_tras_el_mito_del_icoronelazoib/ |trans-title=Siqueiros's true origin: the reality behind the myth of the ''Big Colonel'' |journal=Gente Sur |language=es |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140407090503/http://gentesur.com.mx/2005/10/bel_verdadero_origen_de_siqueiros_lo_que_hay_de_cierto_tras_el_mito_del_icoronelazoib/ |archive-date=2014-04-07 |ref={{sfnref|''Gente Sur''|2005}}}} * {{cite book |last=Lucie-Smith |first=Edward |title=Latin American Art of the 20th Century |publisher=[[Thames & Hudson]] |location=New York |edition=2nd |year=2004 }} * {{cite journal |date=2010-12-28 |title=Buscan fondos para la restauración del Polyforum |journal=Proceso |url=http://www.proceso.com.mx/?p=259822 |trans-title=Funds sought for the restoration of the Polyforum |language=es |ref={{sfnref|''Proceso''|2004}} |access-date=2012-02-19 |archive-date=2021-03-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210302234949/https://www.proceso.com.mx/?p=259822 |url-status=dead }} * {{cite book |last=Stein |first=Philip |author-link=Philip Stein |year=1994 |title=Siqueiros: His Life and Works |location=New York |publisher=International Publishers |isbn=0-7178-0709-6 }} ==Further reading== * Debroise, Olivier. ''Otras rutas hacia Siqueiros''. Mexico City: INBA/Curare, 1996. * Debroise, Olivier. ''So Far from Heaven: David Alfaro Siqueiros' "The March of Humanity" and Mexican Revolutionary Politics''. Cambridge: [[Cambridge University Press]], 1987. * González Cruz Manjarrez, Maricela. ''La polémica Siqueiros-Rivera: Planteamientos estéticos-políticos 1934–35''. Mexico City: Museo Dolores Olmedo Patriño, 1996. * Harten, Jürgen. ''Siqueiros/Pollock: Pollock/Siequeiros''. Düsseldorf: Kunsthalle, 1995. * Jolly, Jennifer. "Art of the Collective: David Alfaro Siqueiros, Josep Renau, and their Collaboration at the Mexican Electricians' Syndicate." ''Oxford Art Journal'' 31 no. 1 (2008) 129–51. * ''Portrait of a Decade: David Alfaro Siqueiros''. Mexico City: MUNAL/INBA, 1997. * Siqueiros, David Alfaro. "Rivera's Counter-Revolutionary Road." ''New Masses'', May 29, 1934. * ''Siqueiros: El lugar de la utopía''. Exhibition catalogue, Mexico City: INBA and Sala de Arte Pública Siqueiros, 1994. * Tamayo, Jaime. "Siqueiros y los orígenes del movimiento rojo en Jalisco: El movimiento minero." ''Estudios sociales'' 1, no. 1 (July–October 1984): 29–41. * Tibol, Raquel. ''Siqueiros, vida y obra''. Mexico City: Colección, 1973. * Tibol, Raquel, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Shifra M. Goldman, and Agustín Arteaga. ''Los murales de Siqueiros''. Mexico City: Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1998. == External links == {{Commons category}} * [http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3AAD%3AE%3A5454&page_number=1&template_id=1&sort_order=1 Siqueiros at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City] * [http://www.lne.es/siglo-xxi/2009/11/23/siglo-xxi-manuel-suarez-teifaros-mexico/837601.html Lne.es] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20080509135111/http://www.polyforumsiqueiros.com/ The Polyforum, Mexico City] * [http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/siqueiros_david_alfaro.html Siqueiros on Artcyclopedia.com] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20060421011336/http://www.e-flux.com/projects/siqueiros/ Siqueiros Image Bank] (collection of photographs used by Siquieros for his work) * Finding Aid for the [[hdl:10020/cifa960094|David Alfaro Siqueiros papers]] at the Getty Research Institute * [http://www.tendreams.org/siqueiros.htm Ten Dreams Galleries] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20070104164624/http://mexico.udg.mx/arte/pintores/david.html Mexico Info Profile (in Spanish)] * [http://www.figureworks.com/20thcentury/siqueiros.html Figureworks.com/20th Century work<!-- bot-generated title -->] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200729023055/http://www.figureworks.com/20thcentury/siqueiros.html |date=2020-07-29 }} at www.figureworks.com {{Artists related to Mexican muralism}} {{Members of the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana}} {{World Constitutional Convention call signatories}} {{Authority control (arts)}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Siqueiros, David}}<!--he always used his maternal surname--> [[Category:Mexican muralists]] [[Category:Social realist artists]] [[Category:1896 births]] [[Category:1974 deaths]] [[Category:Works by David Alfaro Siqueiros| ]] [[Category:Artists from Chihuahua (state)]] [[Category:Mexican communists]] [[Category:Mexican people of the Spanish Civil War]] [[Category:Mexican assassins]] [[Category:Anti-revisionists]] [[Category:People from Cuernavaca]] [[Category:People from Camargo, Chihuahua]] [[Category:People from Morelos]] [[Category:Mexican people of Portuguese descent]] [[Category:Mexican people of Hungarian descent]] [[Category:Mexican Sephardi Jews]] [[Category:20th-century Mexican painters]] [[Category:20th-century Mexican male artists]] [[Category:Far-left politicians in Mexico]] [[Category:Mexican male painters]] [[Category:International Lenin School alumni]] [[Category:Recipients of the Lenin Peace Prize]] [[Category:World Constitutional Convention call signatories]] [[Category:20th-century Mexican Jews]] [[Category:20th-century Sephardi Jews]] [[Category:People from Chihuahua (state)]]
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Templates used on this page:
Template:Artists related to Mexican muralism
(
edit
)
Template:Authority control (arts)
(
edit
)
Template:Blockquote
(
edit
)
Template:Circa
(
edit
)
Template:Citation needed
(
edit
)
Template:Cite book
(
edit
)
Template:Cite journal
(
edit
)
Template:Cite news
(
edit
)
Template:Cite web
(
edit
)
Template:Clarify
(
edit
)
Template:Commons category
(
edit
)
Template:Convert
(
edit
)
Template:Family name hatnote
(
edit
)
Template:ISBN
(
edit
)
Template:Ill
(
edit
)
Template:Infobox artist
(
edit
)
Template:Members of the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana
(
edit
)
Template:Reflist
(
edit
)
Template:Sfn
(
edit
)
Template:Short description
(
edit
)
Template:Snd
(
edit
)
Template:Webarchive
(
edit
)
Template:World Constitutional Convention call signatories
(
edit
)
Search
Search
Editing
David Alfaro Siqueiros
Add topic