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Diablo
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Siete diablos
title Siete diablosdescription Linocut, 21/35. Linograbado, 21/35. 15" x 11" (paper size). From the Posada Presente portfolio.artist/creator Jiménez-Flores, Salvadorsubject Posada, José Guadalupe, 1852-1913 Printmaking Arroyo Seven deadly sins Devil in art Diablo Cactus Nopales Animals Calaveras Calacas Día de los muertos Day of the Dead Día de muertos Días de los muertos Arrogance Envy Wrath Sloth Avarice Gluttony Lust Homage Soberbia Envidia Ira Pereza Abaricia Gula Luluriacontributor National Museum of Mexican Art (NMMA) -
Predicción cumplida
title Predicción cumplidadescription Woodcut, 21/35. Xilografía, 21/35. 15 1/8" x 11 1/8" (paper size). From the Posada Presente portfolio.artist/creator Guerra, Manuelsubject Posada, José Guadalupe, 1852-1913 Printmaking Arroyo Spiral Target Murder Figurative art Devil in art Diablo Masks Guns Blindfold Victims of crimes Animals Homage Firearmscontributor National Museum of Mexican Art (NMMA) -
Untitled
title Untitleddescription Generated laser prints / impresiones generadas por laser. 18 1/4" x 13 1/4" (framed). Collage of 14 fraudulent Mexican stamps. Various dates.artist/creator Hernández de Luna, Michaelsubject Fraud Humor Día de los muertos Day of the Dead Día de muertos Días de los muertos Skull in art Skeletons Clowns in art Roosters Devil in art Diablo Chicago artists Negrete, Jorge, 1911-1953 Gallo Mexico--Chiapas Marcos, Subcomandante Bufónes Joker (Fictitious character) Postage stamps Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN) Religion in art Masks Music Popular culture Irony Fools and jesters Buffoonscontributor National Museum of Mexican Art (NMMA) -
La U.S.A. and the Three Diablos
title La U.S.A. and the Three Diablosdescription Intaglio on paper, 18 in. x 24 in. The New Immigration: Ten Etchings Portfolio by Self Help Graphics, Los Angeles, CA and Galería Sin Fronteras, Austin, TX. A man's head becomes a part of the land as he smiles and looks at the "three diablos" to the right. He has a cap with stars and a bald eagle on his head. There are people running across the land and people picking vegetables in a field in the foreground. In 1988, Sister Karen Boccalero, founder of Self Help Graphics in Los Angeles, and Dr. Gilberto Cárdenas, founder of Galería Sin Fronteras in Austin, co-organized this portfolio of ten etchings by five artists. The prints, sponsored by Self Help Graphics and co-published by Galería Sin Fronteras, were produced at Taller Romero in Mexico City by printer Renato Esquivel Romero. According to Cárdenas, this series pays “homage to the perseverance and dignity of the new Latino immigrants as they struggle with the transition into American society.” He also said that they are a reminder of “the role that immigration plays in enriching the economic vitality of our society and the contributions that the immigrants and their children will have in making American society a better community for tomorrow—a community ‘sin fronteras.’” Each of the five selected artists presented a distinctive perspective on politics, immigration, and the border.artist/creator Limón, Leosubject Eagles Immigration Immigrants Demons Demonios Devil Diablo Workers Figurative art Animals in art Vegetables Stars Estrellas Running Intaglio Prints Allegory Life and Experiences in the U.S./Mexico Borderlands (exhibition)contributor Mexic-Arte Museum (MAM)