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In 1917, José Clemente Orozco left Mexico to find a better place to make art in the United States, but he found trouble along the way.
Two José Clemente Orozco murals at MUSA, the Museum of the Arts in Guadalajara, Mexico, are traveling for exhibition at the L.A. Art show thanks to 3D video mapping, simulated in this video.
More than the others, the murals of José Clemente Orozco drew us back again and again. There was something daring about his compositions, dark in their meanings, risky in their style.
Inspired by the dining hall’s famous “Prometheus” mural by Jose Clemente Orozco mural, four artists from Mexico were commissioned to offer contemporary takes. Their show at the co… ...
The art of José Clemente Orozco, a Mexican painter whose career peaked in the 1920s and 1930s, has long been ripe for a major exhibition, according to Hany Farid, an assistant professor of ...
On the walls of Dartmouth College's Baker Library, José Clemente Orozco's brutally expressive and bitterly pessimistic mural recounts the history of the Western Hemisphere and suggests that the ...
SAN DIEGO — Along with Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros, Jose Clemente Orozco is known the world over as one of the Big Three leaders of the Mexican mural movement. But back in 1927, he ...
n the spring of 1930, the Mexican artist José Clemente Orozco was invited by Pomona College, in Claremont, Calif., to paint a mural on the north wall of the recently completed men’s refectory ...
A set of murals at Dartmouth College by the Mexican artist Jose Clemente Orozco has been named a national historic landmark. Among the other sites to… ...
On the walls of Dartmouth College's Baker Library, José Clemente Orozco's brutally expressive and bitterly pessimistic mural recounts the history of the Western Hemisphere and suggests that the ...