Copyright Credit Line: Courtesy of Fondo Patrimonial En Beneficio De El Colegio de México, A.C., Mexico City, Mexico×
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Agustín Lazo
1939This article praises the artistic qualities of the work of Agustín Lazo, who participated in the international surrealist exhibition a few months later. Cardoza mentions the visual interpretation of the work of Giorgio de Chirico, as well as the use [...]ICAA Record ID: 795181 -
Amero
1937The short article written by the Guatemalan writer extols the artwork of Emilio Amero, who had lived in the United States in the 1920s, enjoying a certain success in the U.S. market. The writer praises the characteristics of the artist’s work— [...]ICAA Record ID: 770207 -
Arte y Revolución
1935According to Luis Cardoza y Aragón, poetry enjoyed greater development in Mexico than the visual arts because the former was situated on the margins of the national-pictorial movement. The proof of this can be found in the confluence of the Mexican [...]ICAA Record ID: 822836 -
Arte y revolución: una polémica en la LEAR
1936In the 1990s, the magazine Memoria reported on a controversy that led to the great 1936 exhibition organized by the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios (LEAR) [League of Revolutionary Writers and Artists]. The article explains that the [...]ICAA Record ID: 779783 -
Exposición de pintura organizada por la LEAR : Divagaciones y pretextos
1936“I believe that the LEAR is on the completely wrong path . . . , it is the only organization in Mexico that is against art.” With these terms, the writer Luis Cardoza y Aragón stated his disagreement with the selection of works presented by the [...]ICAA Record ID: 779286 -
Federico Cantu
1938In this article, Cardoza y Aragón discusses Federico Cantú’s painting, referring particularly to its “fuerza lírica” [lyrical power.] According to the critic, Cantú was a good representative of a new generation of modern Mexican artists. [...]ICAA Record ID: 773429 -
Fotografía retrospectiva
1933This is a marvelously eloquent essay about photography by the learned Guatemalan writer, Luis Cardoza y Aragón, on the occasion of the exhibition organized by Enrique Fernández Ledesma and Manuel Álvarez Bravo at the Sala de Arte in 1933. The [...]ICAA Record ID: 748980 -
Frida Kahlo
1953Cardoza y Aragón believes Mexican painting had reached a unique and magnificent era and in his judgment, some of the works by Frida Kahlo were “some of the best” that had been produced in the last fifteen years. He describes her work as “ [...]ICAA Record ID: 753118 -
José Clemente Orozco decorará la cúpula del monumento a la Revolución
1937Cardoza y Aragón writes about a supposed commission for a mural painting dedicated to José Clemente Orozco, meant for the recently considered monument to the revolution “little known to the majority of the inhabitants.” He describes the work, [...]ICAA Record ID: 765057 -
México, de cerca, de lejos… : a André Breton
1936In 1936 Luis Cardoza y Aragón—the writer who was involved with the surrealist avant-garde while he was in Paris, and later lived in Mexico—heard from the poet André Breton, who asked him for an introduction to the art of Mexico, where he was [...]ICAA Record ID: 760510 -
No hay crisis en la pintura solo estancamiento
1957In this article, Luis Cardoza y Aragón reviews the events of 1957, and laments the deaths of Diego Rivera and Miguel Covarrubias. He lists the various exhibitions taking place in Mexico City, including different murals, such as the Fanny Ravel in [...]ICAA Record ID: 769904 -
Nuevas notas sobre Siqueiros
1948Together with an article published by David Alfaro Siqueiros in México en el arte [Mexico in Art], the current document is part of a conversation between the artist and the Guatemalan critic Luis Cardoza y Aragón, concerning the current state of [...]ICAA Record ID: 733020 -
Nuevos valores plásticos : Jesús Guerrero Galván
1939In his article on the young painter Jesús Guerrero Galván, whose 1939 work amounted to a reinterpretation of European classicism, critic Luis Cardoza y Aragón placed more weight and validity on the formal and visual components of the work of the [...]ICAA Record ID: 759483 -
Servir la revolución, servirse de la revolución
1936Supported by a quote from André Breton —who himself quoted Karl Marx—, Luis Cardoza y Aragón again refutes the exploitation of art by revolutionaries. The tenets that composed the introductory document of the Congreso de Escritores [Writers’ [...]ICAA Record ID: 779791 -
Todo en la pantalla
1936In this article, Luis Cardoza y Aragón identifies the cinematographer Agustín Jiménez as one of the best photographers in Mexico, placing him in the company of Manuel Álvarez Bravo and Emilio Amero. The critic explains the differences between the [...]ICAA Record ID: 748998