dieser beitrag wurde verfasst in: englisch (eng/en)
künstler (in grau: assistent/in): Diego Rivera, William Maltby Sykes
titel: Carnaval de la vida mexicana: Danza de los Huichilobos. México folklórico y turístico. La dictadura. La Leyenda de Agustín Lorenzo
jahr: 1936
+: A mural consisting of four panels (total surface of 24.76 sqm), created to decorate the banquet hall of the Hotel Reforma in Mexico City. "Yankee savants bedecked with asses' ears and fat fountain pens are interpreting the country to the world; an American "miss", of blond locks and arms thin as sticks, presides over the scene; faintly unpleasant masked types wave banners and hold bags of gold, while a plucked chicken represents Mexico." In another panel, a dictatorial figure presides over a carnival, "made up of political personages in all-but-human animal masks. A figure with a long, horse-like face suggests the lineaments of the fellow-traveler labor leader, Lombardo Toledano; a general of porcine visage dances with a girl who signifies Senorita Mexico, while from the basket strapped to her back, General Marrano, (Gen. Porkbarrel) robs her of her fruit."
Alberto Pani, political figure and financier, commissioned Rivera to paint the murals for the large hotel he was building to accommodate "well-to-do American tourists". Rivera's anti-capitalist and politically cynical compositions, put Pani in what he felt was a compromising position, both toward the foreigners to which he was catering and to the Mexican political structure. Pani kept quiet until the murals were completed and Rivera was paid for his work. He then had one of his brothers come in and alter the murals until they were acceptable. A court battle ensued when Rivera was informed of this.
Rivera was awarded 2,000 pesos in damages and allowed to restore the murals. Pani, however, who owned the murals had the panels removed and placed in storage where they remained for twenty years. They were later sold and are now displayed in the Palace of Fine Arts (Palacio de Bellas Artes).