Curtis Swope
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Transition, contradiction, innovation
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The death of Stalin in 1953, the suppression of a workers’ uprising in East Germany and the continued ill-fortunes of the PCM initiated a period of transition and contradiction in Siqueiros’s work covered in Chapter 3. That sense of transition was increased by the long, complicated process of finishing the only two major state mural commissions of 1952–56: For the Complete Safety of All Mexicans at Work, at the Hospital de la Raza, and The University to the People, the People to the University on the rectory building at the UNAM campus. In these works, Siqueiros tipped the scales of his tactical modernism back toward the experimental and dynamic. Capitalism is represented as an expressionist machine for the manufacture of dead bodies, while humanoid figures are rendered in a futurist idiom that gives visual expression to notions of labor as theorized by Lenin, and by Henri Lefebvre in Critique of Everyday Life, Volume 1, written while Lefebvre was still the leading intellectual in the firmly PCF. Siqueiros mobilized the technique of polyangularity to signal the necessity for a close relationship between proletarian action, education, and worker safety. However, rigid bifurcation and a strong sense of direction remained key aspects of the compositions, retaining and expressing the mechanical view of history characteristic of orthodox Marxism and envisioning proletarian leadership in terms of Leninist ideas. That view was tempered by an iconography that envisioned democratic, working-class control of the means of production revealed Siqueiros’s continued interest in the syndicalist political model and foreshadowed his return to a more agitational aesthetic in his murals of the late 1950s.

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Mexican muralist, international Marxist

David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1941–74

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