martes, 24 de julio de 2018

Detrás de una foto II

Las fotografías siempre revelan momentos de vida sin embrago para poder entender la imagen es necesario conocer parte de su contexto y con ello poder interpretarlas
de ahí a que no es tan simple el poder leer los elementos que la componen

En el otoño de 1958 ( cuando se tomo esta foto ) mis padres deciden un cambio , esta vez definitivo para la biografía familiar y esto conllevaría a mudarnos de nuevo de Estado y dejar atrás la ciudad de Monterrey , asi es que despues de mi nacimiento en le Hospital Muguerza y mi bautizo en “La Purísima” dirigido por mi abuelo Federico el cual había decidido que yo llevaría el nombre de su padre, abuelo y bisabuelo para no perder la costumbre del nombre patriarcal . Una vez instalados en la Ciudad de México
Con todo el entusiasmo que caracterizaba a mis padres decoraron la nueva morada ,
La fotografía presenta algunas de las obras que ya nos habrían acompañado en casas anteriores , se trata de obras de caballete que mi abuelo les dedico a mis dos hermanos mayores y a mi papá :

1 Retrato de Fede ( San Juan el bautista )
2 Retrato de Fede ( un retrato dedicado a mi papá antes de su matrimonio )
3 Mi nieto con traje de arlequín
4 Mi nieto Paco
5 Cabezas de Fede

6 Mamalí que había estado ausente durante la época que viviéramos en Monterrey
ahora va a frecuentar la casa y la costumbre se repetirá durante todos los fines de semana

7 esta mesa diseñada por mis papás al igual que la mayoría de los muebles nos acompañaría por años y de laguna manera como es de esperarse, la mayoría del mobiliario fue desapareciendo con los años , al igual que la Casa de Muñecas perteneciente a Frida Kahlo y que armaba el vestíbulo del lobby de la pequeña casa.

8 Las flores siempre serán una tradición adquirida y que aun hoy mi madre cultiva con dedicación

Para terminar con la idea ya en este momento histórico mi abuelo esta trabajando todo ese enrome legado de esculturas, relieves, grabados y pinturas dedicadas a la maternidad del IMSS donde soy el protagonista central , asi es que los tres hermanos desde ese momento formamos parte del pensamiento artístico de mi abuelo Federico Cantú y de paso si bien faltaba mi madre dentro de la imagen familiar , ella fue convertida en Madona IMSS


Bo

martes, 17 de julio de 2018




Initiating the beginning of the international fall art season each September, EXPO CHICAGO takes place at historic Navy Pier, whose vast vaulted architecture hosts leading international exhibitors presented alongside one of the highest quality platforms for global contemporary art and culture. The Galleries section features leading international exhibitors presented alongside one of the highest quality platforms for global contemporary art and culture. Additional sections include: EXPOSURE featuring solo and two-artist presentations represented by galleries eight years and younger, PROFILE presenting solo booths and focused projects that showcase ambitious installations and tightly focused thematic exhibitions, Editions + Books showcasing limited editions and publications offering a diverse array of print media and object-based practices, and Special Exhibitions featuring select regional, national, and international non-profit institutions, museums, and organizations. 


The 2018 EXPO CHICAGO Selection Committee is comprised of leading international gallerists, including Stefania Bortolami | Bortolami, New York; John Corbett and Jim Dempsey | Corbett vs. Dempsey, Chicago; Chris D’Amelio| David Zwirner, New York, London, Hong Kong; Kavi Gupta | Kavi Gupta, Chicago; Rhona Hoffman | Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago; David Nolan | David Nolan Gallery, New York; Javier Peres and Nick Koenigsknecht | Peres Projects, Berlin; Jessica Silverman | Jessica Silverman Gallery, San Francisco; and Susanne Vielmetter | Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, Los Angeles.  With the advisement of the Selection Committee, Executive Director Creative Time Justine Ludwig, returns for the second year to curate the EXPOSURE section —highlighting solo and two-artist presentations of emerging work from galleries eight years and younger. 


sábado, 14 de julio de 2018





Federico Cantú
Paris 1924-1934
14 de Julio
Vida pasión y muerte de Arlequín
FCG Copyright ©


Hace tiempo dentro del ciclo “El circo”: Reflexiones interdisciplinarias , presente el tema
Vida Pasión y Muerte de Arlequín el fenómeno circenses y sus figuras simbólicas , vinculadas con obra de caballete del maestro Federico Cantú 1907-1989 .
Partiendo  primeramente breve introducción de la obra de Cantú y sus transitar por la 
Escuela de Paris , Escuela de Nueva York y la Escuela Mexicana de Pintura
de la Influencia de la Escuela de Paris y los vínculos que mantenía Cantú con pintores como Juan Gris , Pablo Picasso , Mario Carreño , Lino Enea Spilimbergo ,  todos ellos abordando los mismos temas de los Pierrots y saltimbanquis legados por el maestro Pul Cézanne también abordamos la visón de Cantú y sus remembranzas del Circo en Paris y Suzanne Valadon en el Cirque Medrano . ( 1 )

CENIDIAP        
(1) ciclo de conferencias  “El circo”: Reflexiones interdisciplinarias CENIDIAP 2011
 Vida y Muerte de Arlequín – Por  Adolfo Cantú Copyright ©

En esta reflexión abordamos la obra de Federico Cantú, situada a contra corriente de los
lineamientos estéticos de la Escuela Mexicana del siglo XX , analizamos sus lienzos, tintas y proyectos monumentales y la aportación de Cantú en la Universalidad. Así como su
 temática cargada de simbolismos , analogías e historias , todas ellas  surgidas de la 
Escuela de Paris en Montparnasse , al igual que sus vivencias con el grupo vinculado con 
los artistas Latinos  durante su larga estancia en Francia de 1924 a 1934 y los 
poetas malditos . Durante este recorrido visual analizamos obras como : Nacimiento de 
Arlequín , Arlequín triste , Muerte de Pierrot, La Rotonde , Vida y Muerte de Arlequín ,Rapto de Arlequín , Preludio y Triunfo de la muerte ,,Grotescos, ,Arlequín coca, Mascarada, Susana entre los viejos, Arlequines con Ariadna, Descanso






Durante este gran periodo Federico Cantú había tenido la oportunidad de visitar las mas grandes Galerías de Arte de Paris entre ellas la de Ambroise Vollard con esta oportunidad había podido degustar de primera mano el trazo y la temática de Picasso que si bien extendía toda una generación entre su obra su lenguaje lograba a veintiséis años de distancia empataba  con el pensamiento del joven artista, Les Années folleshabían logrado tomar de nuevo el tema de arlequín al grado que muchos de los maestros reconocidos regresaban al tema saltimbanqui y Cantú que había estado ausente todo el 29 había regresado para ponerse a todo con la moda francesa , “Arlequines Coca” es un tema nuevo donde Federico decide regresar a los excesos en todos los aspectos , entandamos que viene de Los Ángeles California en una época donde esta vigente la prohibición y porque no ahora con una gran libertad puede dejar expuesto su gusto por el rape , la cocaína el opio y el alcohol.  Federico permanecería en Paris por cuatro años suficientes para regresar ah contemplar la familia de Arlequín de Picasso donde deja al descubierto que Fernande es representada dentro del tema de la maternidad de arlequín sin embrago no puede tener hijos  la tinta y las primeras obras de caballete de Cantú tienen una factura de 1930-31 sin embargo el mono tipo que presentamos esta pintado ya en Mexico en 1936, paradójicamente abre la puerta a un sinnúmero de obras donde Gloria Calero se eclipsa como Fernande y a pesar de exhibirse como Madona, Virgen o novia jamás poda lograr la fertilidad.
Sin duda Federico permanecerá por siempre pintando y esculpiendo a contra corriente 
quizá La escuela de Paris le ha segado de manera tal que la herramienta , el papel el oleo y la música en su Atelier saben a Paris. No obstante en su ultimo intento por conquistar USA instalando en NY 1938-1941 Cantú recuerda en una carta dirigida a Gloria su visita en 1938 a el Marchante Pierre Matisse ya instalado con mucho éxito en Manhattan en 1938 – Mi querida Gloria ayer visite a Pierre y no te imaginas la cantidad de mamotretos que tiene , si tu vieras lo que se esta vendiendo ahora te sorprenderías-
“Arlequines coca” no es solo una obra ocurrente, es mas que una lucha por permanecer por siempre dentro de esa etapa de miseria, locura y pasión dentro de lo mas grande del pasado siglo XX.







Conclusiones :
Federico Cantú tuvo la fortuna de vivir con intensidad los grandes cambios que trasformaron el lenguaje pictórico del siglo XX , “La Revolución” “ Las Escuelas al Aire Libre”  “Les Années folles”
“ La Escuela Mexicana”  y el surgimiento paralelo de la Segunda gran Guerra con la Escuela de Nueva York
por ello el trata de analizar a la ligera la obra de este titán no es cosa fácil  y requiere de un conocimiento amplio del tema!



Vivencias en el Arte por Adolfo Cantú
Textos Adolfo Cantú
Colección Cantú Y de Teresa
FCG Copyright ©

miércoles, 11 de julio de 2018

Frías, Heriberto - Posada, José Guadalupe. Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano. México: Maucci Hermanos, 1900 - 1901. 







16o. marquilla. Tercera Serie - Después de la Conquista: Diez títulos. Cuarta Serie - La Independencia: Nueve títulos. Última Serie - Época Moderna: 16 títulos (con tres portadas firmadas por José Guadalupe Posada). Encuadernados en rústica. Un ejemplar con pastas por desprenderse. Piezas: 35. 
"La Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano consta de cinco series: Relatos de tradición indígena, Descubrimientos y conquistas, Época colonial, Independencia y Época moderna. José Guadalupe Posada realizó 440 dibujos para la colección. Cada cuadernillo incluía 16 páginas y contaba con una portada impresa a color en la novedosa técnica de cromolitografía, y en el interior tenía tres ilustraciones en blanco y negro. Heriberto Frías mostraba a los niños los hechos más trascendentes de la historia nacional y los momentos difíciles que vivió el país para consolidar la paz. Pese al carácter crítico de Frías y de Posada, ambos relatan una historia no idílica, narran lo complicado que resultaba la construcción del país." 
Véase en: www.inah.gob.mx/es/boletines/5251-la-biblioteca-del-nino-mexicano-llega-al-museo-del-caracol 


lunes, 9 de julio de 2018

CYDT ART 450 Años De Lucha portfolio, the Taller de Gráfica Popular



What May Come: The Taller de Gráfica Popular and the Mexican Political Print

Established in Mexico City in 1937, the Taller de Gráfica Popular (Popular Graphic Art Workshop) sought to create prints, posters, and illustrated publications that were popular and affordable, accessible and politically topical, and above all formally compelling. Founded by the printmakers Luís Arenal, Leopoldo Méndez, and American-born Pablo O’Higgins, the TGP ultimately became the most influential and enduring leftist printmaking collective of its time.
The workshop was admired for its prolific and varied output and for its creation of some of the most memorable images in midcentury printmaking. Although its core membership was Mexican, the TGP welcomed foreign members and guest artists as diverse as Josef Albers and Elizabeth Catlett. The collective enjoyed international influence and renown and inspired the establishment of similar print collectives around the world. This bilingual publication features twenty-four works representing the finest linocuts and lithographs from the heyday of this important workshop. These arresting images are drawn from the significant holdings of TGP works in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago.
The Art Institute of Chicago, 2014 

The most influential and enduring progressive printmaking collective of its time, the Taller de Gráfica Popular (the Popular Graphic Art Workshop or TGP) created some of the most memorable images in mid-century printmaking. This Mexico City–based workshop took up the legacy of the famous Mexican broadside illustrator José Guadalupe Posada, creating prints, posters, and illustrated publications that were popular, affordable, legible, politically topical, and, above all, formally compelling. This exhibition includes over 100 works from the Art Institute’s rich holdings—one of the most significant TGP collections in the United States—demonstrating why this collective boasted such international influence and inspired the establishment of print collectives around the world.


Founded in 1937 by Leopoldo Méndez, Luis Arenal, and American-born Pablo O’Higgins, the TGP emerged and evolved in the crucible of antifascist and leftist politics in Mexico in the period surrounding World War II. This milieu shaped not only the workshop’s dedication to a collective printmaking model but also its production aimed at both “the people” and discerning collectors, a strategy necessitated by the era’s quickly changing political tides. The collective created works for groups spanning the leftist and progressive political spectrum, including the government of Lázaro Cárdenas and his successors, the Mexican Communist Party, major trade unions, and antifascist organizations.


During the TGP’s heyday, from its founding until the 1950s, the workshop produced thousands of prints, primarily linocuts and lithographs, for everything from ephemeral handbills and newspapers to political and advertising posters to luxe portfolios and printed books. Favoring an expressive, realist visual language, its work addressed a wide range of socially engaged themes, including Mexican history and culture, political satires both local and international (including calavera broadsides), rural and urban scenes of daily life, and agitprop prints. The members of the workshop, a core of about 40 during its height, produced both individual and collective works and welcomed numbers of foreign members and guest artists—from Elizabeth Catlett to Josef Albers—to use the workshop in order to collaborate on prints and create individual pieces.








Showcasing the TGP’s prolific and varied output, What May Come is organized into thematic sections such as Chicago connections to the TGP, antifascism, national history, daily life, caricature, and popular visual traditions. A Spanish-English catalogue accompanies the exhibition, which also features bilingual labeling.












Showcasing the TGP’s prolific and varied output, What May Come is organized into thematic sections such as Chicago connections to the TGP, antifascism, national history, daily life, caricature, and popular visual traditions. A Spanish-English catalogue accompanies the exhibition, which also features bilingual labeling.












The prints of the Mexican Taller de Gráfica Popular (TGP - Popular Graphic Arts Workshop), are being presented at the Snite Museum of Art at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana from July 12, 2009 to September 13, 2009. Titled Para la Gente: Art, Politics, and Cultural Identity of the Taller de Gráfica, the exhibition presents forty prints created by artists who worked in the TGP print collective in Mexico City from the mid-1930s to the early 1950s. Internationally known for their highly-political prints, the TGP workshop generated woodblock, linoleum, and lithographic prints that remain unparalleled to this day.
I first discovered the TGP as a teenager in Los Angeles during the late 1960s. For Chicanos, TGP prints provided an exciting touchstone with Mexican art, culture, history, and politics, but in general the artworks also offered universal insights into the human condition – revealing the hidden class dimensions behind issues of poverty, repression, and war. Sometime in the early 1970s I acquired a copy of 450 Años De Lucha: Homenaje Al Pueblo Mexicano (450 Years of Struggle: Homage to the Mexican People), a significant portfolio of prints by twenty-five TGP artists that vividly recounts the history of the Mexican people.

Published by the collective in 1960, 450 Años De Lucha is actually a soft-cover unbound “book” that contains 140 reproductions of prints by artists such as Leopoldo Méndez, Pablo O’Higgins, Alberto Beltrán, Mariana Yampolsky, Alfredo Zalce, Luis Arenal, and Elizabeth Catlett. The prints originally served as street flyers and posters for the political instruction and edification of an illiterate population, and tens of thousands of copies were widely distributed. The free prints were literally – Para la Gente (For the People). As a radical chronicle of Mexico’s entire history, the remarkable print portfolio covers everything from the 1519 heroic Aztec resistance against the Spanish Conquistadors (Cuauhtemoc - Leopoldo Méndez), to a woodblock print celebrating the nationalization of Mexico’s mineral wealth in 1960 (Hacia La Nacionalizacion de la Mineria - Jesus Escobedo).
A focal point of the Snite Museum exhibit is a linoleum block print by Leopoldo Méndez, Paremos la Agresion a la Clase Obrera. Ayude Usted. A los Huelguistas de Palau, Nueva Rosita y Cloete. (Let us Stop the Aggression toward the Working Class. Help the Strikers of Palau, Nueva Rosita, and Cloete). Méndez created the print in 1950 as a street poster calling for solidarity with mine workers in their strike against the U.S. owned company, Mexican Zinc Co. The print is a consummate example of the combative spirit that motivated the TGP collective.
The workers at the Nueva Rosita, Palau, and Cloete mines in Coahuila, Mexico, organized for humane working conditions, decent pay, and union representation, and when they went on strike against Mexican Zinc, the company retaliated by firing the strikers and hiring strike breakers. The Mexican government declared the area under martial law and sent in the army. Union leaders were arrested, the union’s treasury was seized, and union activity banned. The mine company controlled the food supply stores and health care facilities in the strike area, and used that control to crush the worker’s strike by closing down vital services. Around 4,200 striking miners responded by staging a “Caravan of hunger” march, walking more than 400 miles to the capital behind a flag emblazoned with the image of the Virgin de Guadalupe. After walking for 50 days to present their case to Presidente Miguel Alemán, and rallying tens of thousands in the nation’s capital, Alemán declared the strike illegal. The defeated miners were sent back on trains to their hometowns and the strike remained unresolved.
A particularly moving and provocative series of prints by Leopoldo Méndez not displayed at the Snite Museum is the artist’s, In The Name Of Christ: They Have Assassinated More Than 200 Teachers (En Nombre De Cristo: Han Asesinado Más De 200 Maestros). The prints have to do with the counter-revolutionary “Cristero War” of 1926-1929, when fundamentalist Cristeros (“fighters for Christ”) launched an armed rebellion against the Mexican government because of the anti-clerical Mexican Constitution of 1917.
Reformists had worked for a secular democracy that would reduce the Catholic Church’s enormous land holdings as well as end their stranglehold over education; but fundamentalists took up arms in 1926 when Presidente Plutarco Calles began to strictly enforce anti-clerical provisions of the constitution. Religious zealots were vexed by enforcement of provisos like Article 3, which states - “education shall be maintained entirely apart from any religious doctrine and, based on the results of scientific progress, shall strive against ignorance and its effects, servitudes, fanaticism, and prejudices.” However, fundamentalists were most irritated by Article 130, which “States that church(es) and state are to remain separate.” By the time the conflict ended in 1929, some 90,000 people had perished in the violence.
In 1939 the administration of Presidente Lázaro Cárdenas (1934-1940), commissioned Méndez to create a portfolio of seven lithographic prints on the subject of educators who had been murdered by Catholic fundamentalists during the Cristero uprising. The resulting lithographs commemorated seven different teachers who had been brutally slain by religious zealots, depicting the teachers under threat, in the throes of death, or after they had been assassinated. In the lithograph shown above, Méndez portrayed the gruesome killing of Professor Ramón Orta del RíoCreated in 1955, Alberto Beltrán’s original linoleum-block print (above) was reproduced as a poster expressing solidarity with striking workers in Honduras. Since the early 1900s U.S. companies totally controlled Honduran agricultural production and exports, largely based upon the cultivation of bananas, making Honduras the original “Banana Republic.” The Standard Fruit Company and the United Fruit Company – both U.S. businesses – virtually ran the country. It was the president of United Fruit, Sam Zemurray, who infamously said of Honduran officials; “A mule costs more than a deputy.” From 1903 to 1925, the U.S. Marines intervened in Honduras no less than seven times. After decades of ferocious exploitation by U.S. commercial interests, Honduran banana workers staged a historic strike for better working conditions and higher pay that began on May 1, 1954.
Beginning in the north coast town of El Progreso, the strike lasted around two months and involved over 14,000 banana company workers. The work stoppage quickly paralyzed other port towns dominated by U.S. companies, eventually spreading to the capital Tegucigalpa. Workers from other industries went on strike in solidarity with the banana workers, with some 40,000 workers eventually joining the labor action. Activists throughout the hemisphere supported the Honduran workers, and it was at the highpoint of the great strike that Alberto Beltrán created his print, which he titled: La huelga de 50,000 trabajadores hondureños explotados por más de 50 años por el monopolio de la United Fruit Co., es una causa justa (The strike of 50,000 Honduran workers exploited for more than 50 years by the monopoly of the United Fruit Co., is a just cause). Despite harsh repression from the U.S. companies and their paid-off government lackies, the striking workers were victorious and won their major demands.
Beltrán’s Honduran solidarity poster could not be timelier considering the military coup in Honduras at present. If the TGP collective were still in existence it would surely react to the current putsch with fierce condemnation. While President Obama expressed “great concerns” regarding President Zelaya being toppled by the military, the Los Angeles Times noted that:
 in Nayarit, one of Mexico’s 31 states. The killers doused the body of their victim in gas and set him on fire.




“U.S. officials did not demand the reinstatement of Zelaya. The administration left its ambassador to Honduras in place, while several governments in the region recalled theirs. And despite control over millions of dollars in aid and massive economic clout, the administration did not threaten sanctions or penalties against Honduras for the formation of a new government the day after Zelaya was dragged from his bed and removed from the country Sunday. Before Sunday, Obama administration officials were aware of the deepening crisis and said they spoke to Honduran officials in the hope of resolving the dispute and averting a forced transfer of power.”





"Morelos" – Celia Calderón. Linoleum block print. 1960. Detail. In this rare multi-color print from the TGP portfolio "450 Años De Lucha," the artist portrayed José María Morelos, one of the illustrious revolutionary military commanders of the 1810 independence war against Spain. Morelos was eventually captured by the Spanish and executed by firing squad in 1815.





TGP artists focused their considerable artistic skills upon real world outrages like wars and military coups, and there is hardly an offence they did not address through their art, but they also busied themselves with creating sympathetic, dignified, and evocative portrayals of the broad masses of the Mexican people; their labors, aspirations, discontents, and advancements.
In the “Declaration of Principles” published in their 450 Años De Lucha portfolio, the Taller de Gráfica Popular artists proclaimed that their works were part of the “constant struggle to help the Mexican people defend and enrich their national culture, independence, freedom, and peace.” Those principals will undoubtedly be shining through the prints exhibited at the Snite Museum of Art at the University of Notre Dame.
[Another excellent resource for the study of the TGP in general and the works of artist Leopoldo Méndez in particular, is the book Revolutionary Art and the Mexican Print by Deborah Caplow.]









viernes, 6 de julio de 2018

Melancolía :

La obra de Federico esta inmersa en la nostalgia y las vivencias
De una época que jamás volvería para ningún integrante de la reconocida
Escuela de Paris , esta fuerza alcanzada al lograr los tratados de paz de la primera gran guarra
Se nutrió de las mas diversas raíces y teorías del arte dando paso a un breve respiro 
Que en menos de dos décadas quedaría fragmentado con la aparición del Nazismo
Melancolía en la obra de Federico Cantú es solo un respiro de la nostálgica época 
Que pasara en Paris 1924-1934
Textos Adolfo Cantú
Colección Cantú Y de Teresa
FCG Copyright ©


lunes, 2 de julio de 2018

Federico Cantú en el Museo Regional de Morelia 1955
Carta de Alfredo Zalce

La dinámica generada despues del triunfo de la Escuela Mexicana 
Nos obliga ha tratar de aterrizar de una manera formal el conocimiento 
 de nuestro arte , este patrimonio de obra mural, obra de caballete, escultura y grafica que acumulamos durante la época colonial y que consecuentemente nos lleva a los cambios vividos durante el siglo XIX dentro de un serie de eventos que por supuesto  vemos reflejados sin duda en la pintura , escultura y grabado , sin embargo el siglo XX trasformara  estas ideas y conceptos narrativos empatándose con la época revolucionaria  donde los nuevos paradigmas estéticos dibujaran otra realidad





mismos eventos que darán vida a la llamada Escuela Mexicana o Renacimiento del Arte Mexicano. 
Este renacimiento servirá de crisol para amalgamar diferentes creencias estéticas  que darán paso a un centenar de obras monumentales y de caballete surgidas del pincel y cincel de grandes maestros que con el tiempo se convertirán en el toque de piedra de nuevas generaciones de artistas plásticos.













Alfredo Zalce Torres (12 January 1908 – 19 January 2003) was a Mexican artist and contemporary of Diego Rivera, David Siqueiros and other better-known muralists. He worked principally as a painter, sculptor, and engraver, also taught, and was involved in the foundation of a number of institutions of culture and education. He is perhaps best known for his mural painting, typically imbued with "fervent social criticism". He is acclaimed as the first artist to borrow the traditional material of coloured cement as the medium for a "modern work of art". Publicity-shy, he is said to have turned down Mexico's Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes before finally accepting it in 2001.Before his death, Sotheby's described him as "the most important living Mexican artist up to date".



Colección Cantú Y de Teresa
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