In this classic survey, now updated and with full-colour images
throughout, Edward Lucie-Smith introduces the art of Latin America from
1900 to the present day. He discusses in detail major figures such as
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, as well as dozens of less well-known
artists. Those who spent their lives in exile, and artists from Europe
and the US who lived in South America, such as Leonora Carrington, are
all included in this broad, comprehensive view. The artists featured
here have sought for indigenous roots and a local tradition; explored
abstraction, expressionism and new media (video, installation,
performance); entered dialogue with European and North American
movements, while insisting on reaching a wide popular audience for their
work; and created an energetic, innovative and very varied art scene
across the continent today. A new chapter extends the discussion into
the twenty-first century, summarizing key trends and most notable
figures of the last two decades. A constant theme is the embrace of the
experimental and the new by artists across Latin America.
Table of Contents
1. Forerunners and Independents 2. The First Modern Movements 3. Mexican Muralism 4. Muralism Beyond Mexico 5. The Exiles 6. Mexico: Four Women and One Man 7. A Climate of Change 8. Geometric Abstraction 9. Informal Abstraction 10. Expressionist Tendencies 11. Realism, Pop Art and Surrealism 12. Moving Towards the Present 13. Latin American Art Now