Jose Guadalupe
Posada is the most influential Mexican artist that you have probably never hear
of. I leafed through half a dozen art
books featuring Latin American artists, and not one of them mentioned him,
despite the fact that his work is probably more familiar to you than the works
of Diego Rivera or Jose Clemente Orozco, both of whom admired and were
influenced by his work.
Part of the reason
for Posada’s relative obscurity is due to his medium—he was an engraver who
used the same method’s as Francisco Goya a century earlier before his
techniques improved to working lead tintype and zinc plate to produce political
circulars, advertisement flyers, broadsheets, printed music, book covers, and
similar commercial printing. While great
paintings find their way to museums, most of Posada’s work eventually made
their way to the dump.
Posada was a folk
artist, satirically portraying subjects common to his audience—the working
people of Mexico. His caricatures of the
rich, the Catholic Church, and society at large were honest, blunt, and usually
hilarious. While used for commercial
purposes, the caricatures were also political cartoons that lampooned the
pompous while holding a mirror up to the faces of the foolish.
Most of the
engravings fall into three main categories.
First, were the calaveras, meaning skulls or skeletons. Without a doubt, the most popular of Posada’s
creations is La Calavera Catrina (originally known as La Calaca
Garbancero). Skulls and skeletons are
embedded deeply into the culture of Mexico and are a cultural holdover from the
Pre-Columbian religions that fused with the death-oriented monastic orders that
arrived with the Spaniards. The most
popular expression of this is the celebration of November 2, or All Souls Day.
Popularly called Day of the Dead, this holiday is growing increasingly popular
in the US, in part because of immigration from Mexico and also because the
holiday is just plain fun.
For the Day of the
Dead, people make elaborate offerings (often on altars) to departed
relatives: prints, cakes, bread, candy,
and toys in the shape of skulls and skeletons.
Posada engraved elaborate skeletons, but used them as social commentary,
with the finely dressed skeletons used as a metaphor for a corrupt
society. Catrina originally was created
for use on a broadside that poked fun at people of indigenous heritage who, in
contrast, dressed in the latest French fashions and wore makeup to lighten
their skin.
Frequently, Posada
drew surprisingly realistic cartoons of prominent politicians, church
officials, and businessmen, ridiculing their indifference to the poor (and, not
surprisingly, he was frequently jailed).
Perhaps the most
lasting tribute to his art is that this tradition continues to this day, either
reusing the art of Posada, or making such clever new artwork in his style that
it is difficult to tell the new engravings from his originals. You can even find his work in Japanese Manga
comics these days.
It might be
impossible to count in how many ways the calaveras of Posada are still being
used sell merchandise. Last October, a
local department store had a whole section of Day of the Dead knickknacks and tchotchkes for sale (all made in China and all
featuring the work of Posada). Just last
week, I saw a bowling ball bearing a reproduction of La Calavera Caterina.
The second largest
category of engravings were those created about disasters. These included floods, fires, famines,
droughts and—a particular favorite of mine—those about the return of Halley’s
Comet in 1910 (below and to the right).
This category also includes artwork that showed the murders or suicides
of prominent people, births, and executions.
Since Posada was working during the last two decades of the rule of the
dictator, Porfirio
Diaz, there are many
such engravings depicting hangings and firing squads.
The long
dictatorship of Diaz began to unravel during 1910, giving rise to the
beginnings of the Mexican Revolution, the rise to power and assassination of
President Francisco Madero, followed by the beginning of the popular uprising
of Emiliano Zapata. These engravings
form the bulk of the third category of Posada’s work, and they are a treasure
trove for historians, because they document not only the events, but the
public’s reactions to them.
Posada got his start
working for a printer in Aguascaliente.
As a young boy, Jose Clemente Orozco walked to school past the print
shop where Posada worked at an open window.
Orozco said his first drawings were inspired by the engravings he had
seen and that he sometimes copied them in his notebook.
It is hard to over
stress how much the folk art—the simple caricatures and drawing of
Posada—influenced other artists and writers.
When Posada moved to Mexico City, he began working for La Patria
Ilustrada, a
newspaper. The grandson of the editor
was Octavio Paz, who later wrote that he loved the social commentary depicted
in the etchings.
Diego Rivera, the
great painter and muralist, wrote that Posada was his artistic father and
teacher, but the best proof of the engraver’s influence is Rivera’s mural, Dream
of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Central Park. The fifty foot fresco was originally created
for the lobby of the Prado Hotel, but when an earthquake damaged the hotel, it
was painstakingly moved to the Museo Mural Diego Rivera.
Showing historical figures from the Spanish Conquest, the dictatorship
of Porfirio Diaz, and the Mexican Revolution, it has La Calavera Catrina as the
center figure, with Posada to her left, and a ten year-old Rivera to her right,
standing in front of his wife, Frida Kahlo.
(For extra credit, can you identify the gentleman standing to the right
of Frida?)
While his work was
popular during his lifetime, Posada never became wealthy from it, despite
producing an incredible number of original prints. An alcoholic, Posada was perennially broke,
and died in 1913, at the age of 61. He
was buried as a pauper in a public grave, and when no one came forward with the
necessary funds, his bones were thrown out after seven years.
There has to be a
new word invented, some form of super satirical word, since “irony” is not
sufficient to describe the fate of the bones for the artist famous for his
drawings of skeletons.
Oh, yes—the
diminutive man to the right of Frida is Jose MartÃ, the Cuban poet and freedom
fighter. But that is a story for another
day.
Given the monumentally bloody history of the Aztecs in Mexico, it's hardly surprising the skeletal themes in both the church and Mexican culture. When there is so much death in your face all your life, you have to find a way to either embrace the horror or it overwhelms you. The Roman church has a long history dating back to the second century AD of absorbing the culture they enter and making it their own (i.e. Easter, Christmas, Lent, Halloween, and even the Day of the Dead and the Platonic idea of the duality of soul and body none of which is found in Scripture). Posada, like any good artist and satirist, borrowed what his audience knew and put a poofy hat on it. Brilliant! It's nice that he was an equal opportunity offender, lampooning all of them with impartiality.
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