Be it emancipated images of women, power abuse or the horrors of war: From 1923 onwards, Hannah Ryggen wove large-size tapestries that were politically explosive. She felt it important to make sure the statements by her monumental formats were accessible to the general public instead of the ideas getting lost on the walls of private homes.
The key Mexican Modernist painters also set great store on ensuring public visibility for their monumental wall paintings, the âMuralesâ as they were called and which they created at roughly the same time as Hannah Ryggen was busy weaving her tapestries. However, unlike the Scandinavian artist, who took a clear stand on international conflicts and current world issues in her woven works, artists such as Diego Rivera and his contemporaries focused almost exclusively on Mexicoâs domestic political scene.
The manifesto called for the establishment of a social art form
In 1924 Mexican artist David Alfaro Siqueiros wrote a firebrand piece for âel macheteâ (a Mexican daily) in which he said a stance should be taken championing the countryâs indigenous population and protesting against the threat of a military coup led by President Adolfo de la Huertas (Abb. 1). Moreover, in his so-called âManifest of Workers, Painters and Sculptorsâ Siqueiros called for the creation of a social art form to the benefit of the indigenous population and to spread the aesthetics of indigenous art as the basis for modern art in Mexico. From an artistic viewpoint this demand entailed turning away from European Modernism as the all-embracing role model and instead concentrating on Mexicoâs national history â meaning a kind of return to âtheir ownâ cultural traditions.
Siqueirosâ demand can be attributed to the collapse in academic training for artists during the Mexican Revolution, during which Mexican culture was neglected and the European art forms admired as the only true art. The manifesto was supported by prominent artists such as Diego Rivera, JoseÌ Clemente Orozco and Xavier Guerrero.
The goal of the syndicate of workers, painters and sculptors that emerged from this was to influence prevailing art tastes through the medium of public art and in this contribute to popular education and above all the social class struggle. In this regard and under the sign of a return to the founders of Mexican art, the manifesto addressed the countryâs indigenous population, which had been subject to centuries of humiliation, and whose identity emerged as the key motif of Mexicoâs post-revolutionary art.
This new approach was realized through large-format works such as the âMuralesâ, painted on the outside or inside walls of public buildings in Mexico, something that amounted to a paradigm shift. ). Many of these publicly accessible works addressed historical events and the political struggles in Mexico at the time. At the same time, they reflected the artistsâ socialist convictions. The âMuralesâ were financed by the Mexican government through Minister of Education JosĂ© Vasconcelos with a view to conveying a specific national history to the largely illiterate poorer stratum of the population. The fact that the Mexican government helped fund the creation of the âMuralesâ shows how their monumental format also fulfilled a prestigious role.
The motifs showed a supposedly official version of history
With their pictorial program, as formulated in exemplary terms in 1935 by Diego Rivera in his painting at the Palacio Nacional, the Muralists idealized and instrumentalized the indigenous population. In the scenes and narratives they took, the represented the purportedly official version of the nationâs history and present. By subjectively depicting the Revolutionary events, the Muralists took an artistic stance championing the post-Revolution Mexican state and constructed what they claimed was a national cultural identity.
Among all these examples of images we can discern social and political messages as well as the glorification of national values, above all in connection with patriotic heroes. The Mexican âMuralesâ are thus the visualization of the new national focus of Mexican art that its champions called for â a painted manifesto. The Muralists painted manifestos just as Hannah Ryggen wove them, with the difference that unlike Ryggenâs tapestries the murals were intended to promote the national interests of their home country.