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.

An abstract painting with strokes of black and primary colors.

Narrator: Jackson Pollock painted Landscape with Steer using an airbrush and automotive lacquer. He would have encountered these approaches while participating in the Experimental Workshop, an artistic collective that Siqueiros established in New York in 1936. Many of the workshop’s activities were overtly political. They made floats for parades, including one that satirized the control of Wall Street over the political process. Another showed an army of workers knocking Hitler out with a spring-loaded boxing glove. Members of the workshop saw a philosophical link between such revolutionary projects and radical formal experimentation. 

Pollock participated in Siqueiros’s workshop about ten years before he began making the poured paintings that made him famous. But he continued echoing the Mexican artist’s ideas long after they worked together, declaring in 1950 that “each age finds its own technique.” In the 1940s and ‘50s, American artists overwhelmingly moved towards techniques that supported abstraction—but the impact of the Mexican muralists endured. 


Jackson Pollock, Landscape with Steer, c. 1936–37. Lithograph with airbrushed lacquer additions, sheet: 15 7/8 × 22 7/8 in. (40.4 × 58.1 cm); image: 13 11/16 × 18 9/16 in. (34.7 × 47.1 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York; gift of Lee Krasner Pollock, 1970. © 2019 The Pollock-Krasner Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Image © The Museum of Modern Art/Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY

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