mexican rurals
Running head: Murals 1
Submitted By: Yangfuxiao Mei
Course: Art and Social Change in Latin America:
Instructor: Greg Landau
Date: 6th August, 2020
Murals 2
Murals of the 1920s
Orozco
According to chapter three’s Murals of the 1920s, Orozco began his mural painting at
the National Preparatory School in 1923. His paintings evolved from the execution of
apolitical ideas and ethereal European images at the National Preparatory School. He started
painting at the inner stairwell and along the wall at the school. His mural painting work was
unceremoniously interrupted in 1926 by hostility reactions on his previous work, which saw
him suspended from the school. Orozco paintings contained powerful and mostly disastrous
images about revolution, the corrupt justice, false morality hypocrisy, and the Spanish
conquest of Mexico. He believed that the most reasonable, powerful, and purest type of
painting was the mural painting. He viewed mural painting as disinteresting since no person
could change it into an object for material gain. It could also not be changed to cater for the
benefit of the privileged people in the society. To him, the mural painting was owned by
every individual.
Orozco uses several themes in his murals. For instance, in the national preparatory
school, the north wall court decoration was given the gift of nature to man as the central
theme. The painting had several other themes; for example, the decoration of the entrance
door had spiritual and physical integrity themes. The central area decoration had school-
going girls and sun allegory to show warm harmony, and the movement of lines shown
ascendant and dynamic masses. The main door decoration on the left wall panel showed
feminine dominance and warm harmony. The decoration on the sides of the corridor
symbolized masculine dominance and warm harmony while the library door decoration
signified harmony and coldness. The central area decoration of Pasantes meant warm
harmony with the dynamic and ascending movement lines. The right-wing decoration also
Murals 3
symbolized warm harmony and vast dynamic masses. Orozco used the classical fresco
technique while drawing this mural.
The artists use images to come up with several ideas in their mural paintings. For
instance, in the mural done by Orozco, Cortez and Malinche, it symbolized the Spanish
collaboration results in Mexico. According to chapter three’s Murals of the 1920s, the artists
depict Malinche as a slave Indian girl who was given to Cortez by the chiefs. Cortez married
her due to her knowledge of Spanish and Mexican dialects so that she could interpret for him
while communicating with the Aztecs. Orozco portrays the couples whereby they are seen
joining their hands to signify the union. He paints a naked and prone person figure under
Cortez’s right foot. In the mural, Cortez’s lest arm prevents the supplication act for the Indian
by Malinche to show her separation from her past life. The Cortez and Malinche painting
shows subjugation and synthesis of her situation in the nation’s story of colonial intervention
history.
The political message embedded in the mural is seen when Malinche tries to rescue
the Mexican from the cruelty of Cortez. Cortez is seen holding her arm back to show that she
does not belong to the same side as the Mexican the ground since she did not have the power
to beg for their freedom. It also shows that women had no power to fight for the freedom of
the Mexican by that time. The mural shows the historical message of what had happened in
the past in the Mexicans struggle for independence. Cortez is seen stepping on the Mexican to
symbolise that the slavery for the Mexican was not yet over. Malinche used to be a slave
before Cortez picked her to be his interpreter when communicating with the Aztecs.
The mural emphasizes on the role of women since they are used as sexual objects in
the society. In the painting, Malinche and other women painted are nude to symbolise women
as sexual objects used by men because we do not see any man nude by many women are
completely or partly nude in the murals. This depiction does not reflect any change regarding
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how women have been depicted in the society. Women still dress close to nudity to attract the
attention of men in public places or gain more customers especially in a business enterprise.
To date, night clubs use nude women as an entertainment tool and boost drug businesses so
that the owners can gather profits.
Reference
Chapter 3. “The Murals of the 1920s, festival, revolt, and tradition”.
- Submitted By: Yangfuxiao Mei