I first took a class with the Mexican artist José Raúl Anguiano Valadez at UNAM, the México City university, back in the sixties and modeled for him as well. I found myself drawn to his depictions of ordinary people living their daily lives and to his so historically Mexican color palette, warm earth tones mixed in with vibrant, strong hues.
|
I later discovered that I had another connection with Anguiano. In 1937, he had helped found the illustrious Taller de Grafica Popular, the art workshop where my father spent a summer making lithographs in 1941. So, over the years, I would pay close attention to Anguiano’s unfolding work and career.
|
Early on in that career Anguiano would be outspoken in his anti-war views. As time passed, his work would focus more on observing people, often women, and his political views would become a less upfront component of his art. But his feelings for the Mexican people and México’s historical path would always guide his hand. A true man of his people.
Anguiano’s passing in 2006 deeply saddened me. I remember him still as a kindly and caring person and a wonderful draftsman, and I was pleased to realize how important a figure the art world considered him to be. I feel honored to have known him personally.
|
War and the Clergy, enemies of culture. Mural, 1936.
|
Above, La Espina, oil, 1951. Right, a José Raúl Anguiano Valadez self-portrait.
|
Above, Woman with Pottery Bowl, charcoal, 1971. Right, Iguana Seller, lithograph, 1983.
|
Activist Vicky Hamlin is a retired tradeswoman, shop steward, and painter. In her painting and in this column, she shines the light on the lives of working people and the world they live in.
|
|