Pedregal (The Lava Field)

Name/Title

Pedregal (The Lava Field)

Entry/Object ID

1995.12.23

Type of Print

Lithograph

Artwork Details

Medium

Paper, ink

Acquisition

Accession

1995.12

Source or Donor

Edward Stowe Akeley

Credit Line

Courtesy of Edward Stowe Akeley

Made/Created

Artist

José Clemente Orozco

Date made

1928

Edition

Edition Size

100

Edition Number

31

Notes

signed in pencil on lower left below image

Inscription/Signature/Marks

Type

Print number and run

Location

lower left below image

Transcription

31/100

Material/Technique

Pencil, Written

Type

Signature

Location

lower right below image

Transcription

J. C. Orozco

Material/Technique

Written, Pencil

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Tertiary Object Term

Lithograph

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Print, Planographic

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Print

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Graphic Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Dimensions

Dimension Description

22 x 26

Height

12-1/8 in

Width

16 in

Provenance

Provenance Detail

Source Notes

Role

Information provided by source.

Notes

Professor and Mrs. (Anna) Edward Stowe Akeley, West Lafayette, Indiana; donated to Purdue University Galleries in 1995

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Cultural/Historical Context

Label

"For expressiveness, technique and inspiration, the work of José Clemente Orozco is without parallel. An original and powerful artist, his tragic view of existence is profoundly moving. He entered the Academy of Fine Arts in Mexico City in 1909. With the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution in 1910, Orozco became an active participant aligned with the supporters of Carranza. He rapidly became disenchanted with the excesses of this period and depicted them in a series of satirical drawings. From 1917 to 1922, Orozco worked in California, returning to Mexico after the establishment of a stable government. His first murals were for the National Preparatory School of San lldefonso done from 1922-27. From 1927 to 1934 Orozco worked in the United States, executing murals at Pomona College in California, the New School for Social Research in New York, and Dartmouth College. In the summer of 1932, Orozco made his only trip to Europe, visiting Paris and London and touring Spain and Italy, where he was particularly impressed by the medieval frescos. After his return to Mexico in 1934, Orozco received many mural commissions including work for the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City; the University, Orphanage and Government Palace in Guadalajara; and the Library in Jiquilpán. His crowning achievement is in his frescoes made in 1939 for the auditorium of the lnstituto Cabañas. Here he painted La Conquista depicting the atrocities and contradictions of the modern world. La obra de José Clemente Orozco no tiene parangón en cuanto a su expresividad, técnica e inspiración. Fue un artista poderoso y original, y su trágica visión de la existencia es profundamente conmovedora. Entró a la Academia de Bellas Artes de la ciudad de México en 1909, y con el estallido de la Revolución Mexicana en 1910, se transformó en un participante activo, aliado con los partidarios de Carranza. Rápidamente quedó desencantado por los excesos de este período, que ilustró con una serie de dibujos satíricos. De 1917 a 1922, Orozco trabajó en California y volvió a México cuando se instaló un gobierno estable. Sus primeros murales fueron hechos en la Escuela Preparatoria Nacional de San lldefonso entre 1922 y 1927. De 1927 a 1934, Orozco trabajó en los Estados Unidos, y realizó murales en el Pomona College de California, Ia New School of Social Research de Nueva York y el Dartmouth College. En el verano de 1932, Orozco hizo su único viaje a Europa, donde visitó París, Londres, e hizo una gira por España e ltalia. En estos últimos países lo impresionaron particularmente los frescos medievales. Cuando regresó a México en 1934, le encargaron murales para numerosos sitios, incluido el Palacio de Bellas Artes de la capital, la Universidad, el Orfanato, el Palacio de Gobierno de Guadalajara y la Biblioteca de Jiquilpán. La obra que lo consagró fueron los frescos que pintó en 1939 para el auditorio del lnstituto Cabañas, donde plasmó La conquista , que describe las atrocidades y contradicciones del mundo moderno."