Vida Americana: Mexican Muralists Remake American Art, 1925–1945

2020

“[Rivera] was fascinated by the ways in which man and machinery meet, and the ways in which they change the world together.” —Mark Castro

Hear from artists, scholars, and the curators of Vida Americana: Mexican Muralists Remake American Art, 1925–1945 speaking about works on view.

A painting of a forest.

Narrator: To make Electric Forest, Siqueiros brought experimental methods to one of the most traditional genres in art history—the landscape. 

Sarah Humphreville: The material that he's using is Duco, which is material mostly associated with automotive paint, it's a brand name of nitrocellulose and it's, by its very chemical nature, explosive. 

Narrator: Senior Curatorial Assistant Sarah Humphreville. 

Sarah Humphreville: Siqueiros considered the paintbrush “an implement of hair and wood in the age of steel.” So he really thought that it was outmoded. And you can see in this image that there is a forest of types of mark-making, a real diversity of how to apply material to the surface. He applied materials using a variety of techniques, including airbrush and spray gun, which you can see, especially in the white portions, but also in certain areas of the black that create halos around the trees. He also used stencils, which you can see in the very bottom, in these clusters of figures—each figure is a little stencil and he ends up kind of creating a spotlight on them. But they're not in repose. They're not resting in nature, the way we often see—these are figures that are terrified.  


David Alfaro Siqueiros, The Electric Forest, 1939. Nitrocellulose on cardboard, 28 × 35 in. (71.1 × 89 cm). Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields; gift in memory of Ann Tyndall Durham. 46.74 © 2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SOMAAP, Mexico City

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