Museo Mural Diego Rivera
The Museo Mural Diego Rivera is a small museum in Mexico City. This site highlights Rivera’s fresco mural, “Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park” with the capability of text in English or Spanish. The rest of the “Man of Tepexpan” and the paintings of Bonampak are discovered. The National Prize of Art to the painter is granted to him Jose Clemente Orozco. Diego Rivera, to his almost 60 years, has made paintings murals in veitiún different sites as much in Mexico as in the United States. Again he is contracted to make a work mural, in this occasion, for the Hotel of the Prado (still in construction). The following year, in 1947 he is created the National Institute of Beautiful Arts with Carlos Chávez like director and the National Museum. Cortez; a heretic suffering under the Spanish Inquisition; Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, a brilliant, progressive woman who became a nun to continue her scholarly pursuits; Benito Juárez, seen putting forth the laws of Mexico’s great Reforma; the conservative Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna, handing the keys to Mexico to the invading American Gen. Winfield Scott; Emperor Maximilian and Empress Carlota; José MartÃ, the Cuban revolutionary; Death, with the plumed serpent (Quetzalcoatl) entwined about his neck; Gen. Porfirio DÃaz, great with age and medals, asleep; a police officer keeping La Alameda free of “riffraff” by ordering a poor family out of the elitists’ park; and Francisco Madero, the martyred democratic president who caused the downfall of DÃaz, and whose betrayal and alleged murder by Gen. Victoriano Huerta (pictured on the right) resulted in years of civil turmoil.
Mural Diego Rivera: Acapulco
Palacio de Bellas Artes
The Palacio de Bellas Artes ("Palace of Fine Arts") is an opera house in Mexico City. It was designed by the Italian architect Adamo Boari in 1901 but construction was not completed until 1934.
The building is famous for both its extravagant Art Nouveau exterior in imported Italian white marble as well as its murals by Diego Rivera, Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and José Clemente Orozco
(Rivera's "Man in Control of the Universe" (or "Man at the Crossroads") mural was originally painted for the Rockefeller Center in New York City but Rockefeller ordered it destroyed for being too
Museo Estudio Diego Rivera
From December of 1986 it is a site museum, that conserves, it preserves, it studies, it exhibits and it spreads to the life and the work of the muralista painter guanajuatense Diego Rivera, of its wife, the painter Frida Kahlo, as well as of the painter Juan O'Gorman and his contemporaries, nationals and foreigners. The two Fridas and several other of her most well-known works were painted here. Behind her house - the smaller of the two - is a building used as a photographic studio by Frida's father. The large living room/studio in
Diego Rivera Anahuacalli Museum
One confuses narrowly, not with Museo Estudio Diego Rivera San angel hotel, this one is alleged the most unusual museum in the city. At the point by Will rivet before its death in 1957, it devoted itself, like its vast accumulation with its work art VOR-Kolumbianische. With more than 52.000 pieces, it is the greatest private accumulation which is indicated to Mexico. Conceived pedregal (the rocks of lava, to which the sector abundance has), it resembles of Aztekearchitektur and Maya. Anahuacalli means "the house of Mexico"; Anahuac was the old name for the old undercrust of Mexico.
Alameda Central [Historic District] : Mexico City
Alameda Central is a downtown oasis of greenery, fountains and statuary. The imposing Palacio de Bellas Artes, a performing arts venue and a must-see for its art-deco interior, is next to the park. In the part of the Centro Historico between Alameda Central and the Zocalo are several impressive buildings and museums, including the Palacio de Iturbide (an Italian baroque palace), Casa de Azulejos (the House of Tiles), the Correo Central (the lovely main post office), the Museo Nacional de Arte (a grand building with Mexican art exhibits) and Museo de Franz Mayer (religious
Museo Frida Kahlo - Frida Kahlo Museum
This was home to the enigmatic painter Frida Kahlo (often called "the paintbrush of angst") where she occasionally lived with her husband Diego Rivera. The place outside the house of this remarkable painter and her husband Diego Rivera, serves today as a modest enclosure as tribute to its life and builds. Frida Kahlo (1910-1954) - the brush of the anguish was run over by a bus when as soon as counted on 16 years of age, during the rest of her life it underwent the consequences of this accident and throughout his laborious convalecencia
Diego Rivera Studio Museum: Mexico City
Palacio Nacional
The Palacio Nacional that we see today dates back to 1693, although a floor was added in the 1920s. Inside there is a wonderful collection of murals by Diego Rivera. Diego Rivera's sweeping, epic murals on the second floor of the main courtyard exert a mesmeric pull. For more than 16 years (1929-45), Rivera and his assistants mounted scaffolds day and night, perfecting techniques adapted from Renaissance Italian fresco painting. The most famous one is the "Epic of the Mexican People in their Struggle for Freedom and Independence", where two thousand years of history are condensed into the
Museo Leon Trotsky
Leon Trotsky, the Russian revolutionary, lived in this house from 1939 until his assassination in 1940. Before moving here there am lived with the muralists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo. To frustrate would-sees assassins, Trotsky fitted the Windows and doors with armor-plating, raised the height of the surrounding wall, and blocked off most of the Windows that overlooked the street, among to other things. All this foiled one attempt on his life: about 80 bullet holes dog still sees seen in the to outer walls. However, these precautions did not stop Ramon Merchant, to regulating visitor to the
Biblioteca Octavio Paz: Guadalajara
Currently a library, this building previously was the temple of the CompañÃa de Jesus (Company of Jesus). The impressive mural found here was painted in 1917 by the internationally renowned muralist Jose David Alfaro Siqueiros and Amado de la Cueva, a TapatÃo painter. The mural depicts labor and rebellion. The life of the peasant worker alongside the maize and sugar cane harvest is depicted on one side, while the factory worker is evoked alongside machines and trade unions, electricity and mining. A fierce rebellion erupts where the two worlds meet in the middle of the mural. The