
Lenin, holding the hands of workers of all races – unity of the proletariat -, in the mural ‘El hombre controlador del universo’ by Diego Rivera, in the Palacio de Bellas Artes
Obviously, just the few pictures in the Mexico City (2) entry are not going to be enough to demonstrate the beauty of the work of Mexico’s muralists, the painters who are responsible for the many large frescoes in several public places. From the early 1920s onwards the big three, Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros left their traces in museums, ministries, churches and schools, of which we managed to visit a couple – not all, some, like those in the Presidential Palace and in the Supreme Court, proved out-of-bounds.
Below a selection, including details of some of the paintings, which otherwise would be lost in the vastness of the complete mural.

probably the largest of the murals in the Palacio de Bellas Artes, ‘El hombre Controlador del Universo’ by Diego Rivera (1934)

‘Katharsis’, a mural by Orozco, depicting the chaos and political unrest in 1930s Mexico – in the Palacio de Bellas Artes




































