Fine Arts | Early 20th-Century Mexican Art: Roots and Revolution
A346 | 1875 | Ciofalo
Via the media of printmaking, photography, painting, and film, this course thematically surveys
the principal artists and movements in early 20th-century Mexican art. Against the backdrop of
the Mexican Revolution, an acute historical consciousness, and idealism for the future, the
following themes and artists, among others, will be examined: Velasco's Vistas, Posada's Mexico,
Goitia--Mexico's Goya, Saturnino's Sensuality, Mexican Muralism, Photography and Revolution,
Frida Kahlo's Brush of Anguish, the Art of the Fantastic, Magical Realism, and Hollywood's
perspective from Brando to 'Like Water for Chocolate.'
Course requirements include one midterm exam (30%), one final (non-comprehensive) exam
(30%), three short papers (one or all may be in class) (30%), and a one-page journal response to
one image per topic (not to be graded, only completed and turned in) (10%).