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Gráfica Popular
The Political Broadsheet: The Taller de Gráfica Popular
The Taller de Gráfica Popular (The People’s Print Workshop), commonly known as the TGP, was established in Mexico City in 1937 by artists Leopoldo Méndez (1902–1968), Luis Arenal (1908–1985), Raúl Anguiano (1915–2006), and Pablo O’Higgins (1904–1983). The TGP was a collective center for the creation of sociopolitical art. Sharing the post-revolutionary idealism of the Mexican muralists, the TGP aimed to reach a broad audience, primarily through the dissemination of inexpensive wood- and linoleum-block prints. The group’s declaration of principles announced, “The TGP believes that, in order to serve the people, art must reflect the social reality of the times and have unity in content and form.”
In an effort to be relevant to workers and their struggles, artists created works that were highly didactic. The workshop’s output, which included posters, prints, portfolios, and other illustrations, was enormous. Most of the works made in the 1930s and 1940s—the workshop’s heyday—expose the exploitation of the poor, attack the abuse of peasant rights, criticize the land-ownership system, and denounce European fascism and United States imperialism. A remarkable aspect of the TGP is that it was open to applicants from all social classes and occupations; it also included a number of foreign artists. The TGP earned international acclaim, which led to the creation of similar workshops throughout the world.
- Ilona Katzew, 2008
Leopoldo Méndez
Verdi, 1951
José Chávez Morado
Campesino de Guanajuato (Guanajuato Farmer), 1942
Pablo O'Higgins
Maguey, 1949
Leopoldo Méndez
Plundering the Yaqui’s Land (Don Porfirio’s Army at the Service of Yankee Businesses) Despojo de la tierra a los Yaquis (El ejército de Don Porfirio al servicio de las empresas yanquis), 1947
Isidoro Ocampo
Francisco I. Madero (1873-1913), 1947
Leopoldo Méndez
Homage to the Heroic Army of Yugoslavian Guerrillas (Homenaje al heroico ejército de guerrilleros yugoeslavos), 1942
Leopoldo Méndez
Little School Teacher, How Immense is Thy Will! (Pequeña maestra, ¡qué inmensa es tu voluntad!), 1947, published 1948
Leopoldo Méndez
You Conquered (Venciste), 1947, published 1948
Leopoldo Méndez
Deportation to Death (Deportación a la muerte), 1942
Leopoldo Méndez
Assassination of Jesús R. Menéndez in Cuba (Asesinato de Jesús R. Menéndez en Cuba), 1948
Leopoldo Méndez
Calaveras estranguladoras (Strangling Calaveras), 1942
Alfredo Zalce
Expropriation of the Oil Industry (La expropiación de la industria del petróleo), 1938
Leopoldo Méndez
Hunger in Mexico City in 1914–15 (El hambre en la ciudad de México, en 1914-15), 1947
Leopoldo Méndez
Plutarco Elías Calles Is Deported by Order of the Government of General Lázaro Cárdenas. 1936 (Plutarco Elías Calles es deportado por órdenes del gobierno del general Lázaro Cárdenas. 1936), 1947
Jules Heller
Woman in the Kitchen (Mujer en la cocina), 1947
Alberto Beltrán
Allegory Against the Opposition (Alegoría contra la reacción), 1946
Alfredo Zalce
In Times of Don Porfirio (En tiempos de Don Porfirio), 1945
Leopoldo Méndez
Freedom of the Press (“We Adopt a Patriarchal Policy,” Porfirio Díaz) (Libertad de prensa; “Adoptamos una política patriarcal”, Porfirio Díaz), 1947
Arturo García Bustos
The Boy Heroes of Chapultepec. (1847) [Los niños héroes de Chapultepec. (1847)], 1947
Leopoldo Méndez
Struggle against the Instigators of a New War in Favor of Peace (Lucha contra los provocadores de una nueva guerra y en favor de la paz), 1948