Posada's Broadsheets: Mexican Popular Imagery 1890-1910 - Jewish Latin American Art History Book for Collectors & Scholars | Perfect for Art Exhibitions, Cultural Studies & Home Decor
Posada's Broadsheets: Mexican Popular Imagery 1890-1910 - Jewish Latin American Art History Book for Collectors & Scholars | Perfect for Art Exhibitions, Cultural Studies & Home Decor

Posada's Broadsheets: Mexican Popular Imagery 1890-1910 - Jewish Latin American Art History Book for Collectors & Scholars | Perfect for Art Exhibitions, Cultural Studies & Home Decor

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Description

José Guadalupe Posada (1852-1913), a Mexican graphic artist, lived during one of Mexico's most chaotic times. The graphic illustrations he produced for the "broadsheets," the tabloids of the day, distributed on the streets of Mexico City became icons of Revolutionary Mexico, portraying murder, suicides, robberies, and disasters endured by the citizens, especially the Mestizo, of Mexico City."In this well-written and handsomely illustrated book, art historian Patrick Frank examines the European (i.e. French and Spanish) and Mexican influences on Posada's art as well as the many stories that served as the sources for his illustrations."--The Historian"Posada's broadsheets detail many stories that were front-page news at the time and include a variety of colorful characters, among them Jesus Negrete, a Mexican Robin Hood-type career criminal, as well as a man who killed his parents and ate his baby son. . . . Frank shows that Posada took the point of view of the working class, not from the defenders of the regime or of its organized opposition."--Umbrella

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Patrick Frank superbly presents Posada's world, which is a haunting, roughly-printed portrayal of Mexico at the turn of the 20th Century. It is rare that a popular communication form so well captures a time and place, while transcending that form to a level of art -- and thankfully that is well conveyed here to current readers, incorporating not only visual but also literary art of the period to bring broadsheets to our eyes. Posada's work ranges from dark to humorous, illustrating an ubiquitous view of pre-revolution Mexican life, from urban existence to folkloric rural life. His images flourish with legendary bandits, prison executions, valientes, and supernatural entities from grinning pests to snarling horned iguanas. As Diego Rivera admiringly said, Posada was "an illustrator of legends." Frank has produced, with lavish illustrations, a fine work about a extraordinary chronicler of an era, and of the human condition.
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