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Jose Clemente Orozco

From Conservapedia - Reading time: 1 min

Mural de Hidalgo

José Clemente Orozco (Ciudad Guzmán 1883 - Mexico City 1949) was a Mexican Social Realist Muralist painter. Along with David Alfaro Siqueiros and Diego Rivera, Orozco was one of the most important artists in the Mexican mural movement. [1]

Between 1936 and 1939, Orozco painted the celebrated frescos: "The People and Its Leaders" and "Miguel Hidalgo". His best frescos are at the Guadalajara's Hospicio Cabañas, showing a historical panorama of Mexico. In 1948, he painted a huge portrait, "Juárez Reborn". Throughout his career, Orozco combined painting with drawing and lithography. With his political views, he was a superb cartoonist. As Rivera and Siqueiros, politically he was a leftist.

Social Realism painting is focused on social issues.

Artistically we admired Orozco's ability to invest his figures with tremendous emotion and anatomical volume by means of his non-academic treatment of the human figure. [2]
Juárez, La reforma y la caída del Imperio. 1934.


Hernán Cortés seen by José Clemente Orozco

See also[edit]

Mural at Baker Library, Dartmouth College.

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  2. Orozco and Anglo-America by Sol Levenson

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