This title features numerous large-scale details of Rivera's murals, allowing their various components and subtleties to be closely examined.
Rivera Diego Livres
- Barrientos, Diego María Rivera






Diego Rivera : 1886-1957 : A Revolutionary Spirit in Modern Art
- 96pages
- 4 heures de lecture
Diego Rivera - A revolutionary and troublemaker It was as a revolutionary and troublemaker that Picasso, Dalí and André Breton described the husband of Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, but he was also responsible for creating a public art that was both highly advanced and profoundly accessible. From 1910 Rivera lived in Europe where he absorbed the influence of Cubism. After the Mexican revolution, however, he returned to his homeland and harnessed the lessons of the European avant-garde to the needs of the Mexican people. His own murals, and those of the Mexican Muralists who followed his example, presented a utopian vision of a post-revolutionary Mexico. Rivera’s historical paintings expressed his interpretation of the revolution and its ideals, in a style that showed him returning to the pre-Columbian roots of Mexican culture, re-inventing a colourfully realistic visual idiom that could appeal directly to a largely illiterate people. This is the first study which, independently of the exhibition circuit, coherently presents the work of this extraordinary artist. About the Each book in TASCHEN’s Basic Art series
My Art, My Life: An Autobiography
- 224pages
- 8 heures de lecture
A richly revealing document offering many telling insights into the mind and heart of a giant of 20th-century art. "There is no lack of exciting material. A lover at nine, a cannibal at 18, by his own account, Rivera was prodigiously productive of art and controversy." — San Francisco Chronicle. 21 halftones.
Diego Rivera
- 30pages
- 2 heures de lecture
Details Rivera's Detroit Industry fresco cycle. This book includes information on the artist and his technique and his patron (Edsel Ford).
Rivera
30 Postcards


