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The war murals
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Chapter 1 treats three of Siqueiros’s politically charged murals of the World War II era: Death to the Invader, completed in Chile in 1942, Cuauhtémoc against the Myth (1944), originally located in Siqueiros’s mother-in-law’s house, which doubled as his Center for Modern Realist Art, and New Democracy (1945), along with the accompanying panels Victims of War (1944/45) and Victims of Fascism (1944/45) at the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City. These murals are treated in the international context of communist resistance art during and just after World War II, during much of which Siqueiros was in exile after the attack on Trotsky but still in touch with his friends Neruda and Ehrenburg. The murals form a “war trilogy” in which Siqueiros reserved a central role for the Soviet Union even as he negotiated the possibility for nationally specific versions of communist politics to emerge in Latin America and Eastern Europe. The works use the abstract qualities of composition to reveal history in terms of larger structures and forces that appear to transcend the agency of particular people and groups. At the same time, Siqueiros’s representation of the body—often in highly eroticized ways—is very much in keeping with existentially inflected resistance art from the contemporaneous films of Roberto Rossellini to the contemporaneous texts of Italo Calvino, Bertolt Brecht, and Jean-Paul Sartre which tap into the elemental, biological rudiments of human existence as a potential source of revolutionary action.

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Mexican muralist, international Marxist

David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1941–74

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