GENERAL DESCRIPTION
A proud member of the Generación de la Ruptura—a group of Mexican artists who sought to rupture, or break away from, the then wildly popular muralism movement—José Luis Cuevas remains staunchly opposed to the expression of political or social themes in art. Heavily influenced by both Pablo Picasso and Francisco de Goya, Cuevas’ subjects are often those living on the fringes of society—madmen, prostitutes, criminals, the impoverished. Here he drew a ward of a Mexico City sanatorium. The figure’s hands peek out from his cloak and gesture nervously in his lap. His mouth opens as if to scream, his eyes cast with a blank stare. Less concerned with recording the unlivable environments endured by patients and inmates, Cuevas worked to convey the miserable psychological and physical state of those within these fringe spaces.
Excerpt from
Tower Gallery: Latin American Art, Label text, 2017.
NOTES
Tower Gallery: Latin American Art, 2017.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cuevas_José Luis: ULAN: 500021586
Cultures
Geography
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Mexico City (Mexico): TGN: 7007227
Process/materials
ink: AAT: 300015012
ink washes: AAT: 300266217
paper (fiber product): AAT: 300014109
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
drawing (visual works): AAT: 300033973
works on paper: AAT: 300189621
Mexican Muralist (movement): AAT: 300107850
figures (representations): AAT: 300189808
human figures: AAT: 300404114
sitting (seated): AAT: 300263970
artists (visual artists): AAT: 300025103
political art: AAT: 300256621
politics: AAT: 300055537
Picasso_Pablo: ULAN: 500009666
Goya_Francisco de: ULAN: 500118936
prostitutes: AAT: 300189023
crime: AAT: 300055289
hospital wards (health facility spaces): AAT: 300004543
asylums (welfare buildings): AAT: 300006752
psychiatric hospitals (mental health facilities): AAT: 300006733
sanatoriums (extended care facilities / health facilities): AAT: 300006720
hands (animal or human components): AAT: 300310193
cloaks (outerwear): AAT: 300046142
gesture: AAT: 300056179
mouths (animal or human components): DMA
eyes (animal or human components): AAT: 300400484
patients (people): AAT: 300189316
inmates (people): AAT: 300190096
psychology: AAT: 300054446
urban fringes (urban areas): AAT: 300154319
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
From 1955: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas Art Association Purchase [1], [2], [3], [4]
[1] The main source for this provenance was existing information in TMS (in Dallas Museum of Art Digital Collections Records Object Files). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[2] The main source for this provenance is letter from José Gómez-Sicre, Visual Arts Section of Pan American Union, Washington, D.C., to Jerry Bywaters, Director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts (dated March 29, 1955, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File, Confidential). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[3] The main source for this provenance is letter from Jerry Bywaters, Director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, to José Gómez-Sicre, Visual Arts Section of Pan American Union, Washington, D.C. (dated April 20, 1955, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File, Confidential). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[4] The Dallas Art Association is the predecessor to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name was abandoned in 1970. Works from this collection were transferred to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
WEB RESOURCES
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1955.4
Category
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General Description
A proud member of the Generación de la Ruptura—a group of Mexican artists who sought to rupture, or break away from, the then wildly popular muralism movement—José Luis Cuevas remains staunchly opposed to the expression of political or social themes in art. Heavily influenced by both Pablo Picasso and Francisco de Goya, Cuevas’ subjects are often those living on the fringes of society—madmen, prostitutes, criminals, the impoverished. Here he drew a ward of a Mexico City sanatorium. The figure’s hands peek out from his cloak and gesture nervously in his lap. His mouth opens as if to scream, his eyes cast with a blank stare. Less concerned with recording the unlivable environments endured by patients and inmates, Cuevas worked to convey the miserable psychological and physical state of those within these fringe spaces.
Excerpt from
Tower Gallery: Latin American Art, Label text, 2017.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
Tower Gallery: Latin American Art, 2017.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cuevas_José Luis: ULAN: 500021586
Cultures
Geography
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Mexico City (Mexico): TGN: 7007227
Process/materials
ink: AAT: 300015012
ink washes: AAT: 300266217
paper (fiber product): AAT: 300014109
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
drawing (visual works): AAT: 300033973
works on paper: AAT: 300189621
Mexican Muralist (movement): AAT: 300107850
figures (representations): AAT: 300189808
human figures: AAT: 300404114
sitting (seated): AAT: 300263970
artists (visual artists): AAT: 300025103
political art: AAT: 300256621
politics: AAT: 300055537
Picasso_Pablo: ULAN: 500009666
Goya_Francisco de: ULAN: 500118936
prostitutes: AAT: 300189023
crime: AAT: 300055289
hospital wards (health facility spaces): AAT: 300004543
asylums (welfare buildings): AAT: 300006752
psychiatric hospitals (mental health facilities): AAT: 300006733
sanatoriums (extended care facilities / health facilities): AAT: 300006720
hands (animal or human components): AAT: 300310193
cloaks (outerwear): AAT: 300046142
gesture: AAT: 300056179
mouths (animal or human components): DMA
eyes (animal or human components): AAT: 300400484
patients (people): AAT: 300189316
inmates (people): AAT: 300190096
psychology: AAT: 300054446
urban fringes (urban areas): AAT: 300154319
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
From 1955: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas Art Association Purchase [1], [2], [3], [4]
[1] The main source for this provenance was existing information in TMS (in Dallas Museum of Art Digital Collections Records Object Files). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[2] The main source for this provenance is letter from José Gómez-Sicre, Visual Arts Section of Pan American Union, Washington, D.C., to Jerry Bywaters, Director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts (dated March 29, 1955, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File, Confidential). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[3] The main source for this provenance is letter from Jerry Bywaters, Director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, to José Gómez-Sicre, Visual Arts Section of Pan American Union, Washington, D.C. (dated April 20, 1955, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File, Confidential). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[4] The Dallas Art Association is the predecessor to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name was abandoned in 1970. Works from this collection were transferred to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
rules
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Objects
number
Equals
1955.4
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object_notes_4_a-0015.xml.nores