Artist: Manuel Manilla, (b. in Mexico City, 1830, d. 1895).
Title: "Vaya un torito embolado que al comercio ha revolcado."
a broadsheet with a poem about a drunk bull who apparently attacked several people in the market.
Photo-relief, woodcut, wood engraving and letterpress on beige paper (30 × 20 cm).
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Manilla, Manuel, ca. 1880-1910.
Artist: Manuel Manilla, (b. in Mexico City, 1830, d. 1895).
Title: La Calavera infernal. A broadsheet.
The most recurrent theme in his prints, the Calavera (skull), was probably invented by his contemporary Manuel Manilla, but Posada popularized it as a national icon (Source: https://www.moma.org/collection/works/69392).
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Manilla, Manuel, ca. 1880-1910.
Title: Antonio Vanegas Arroyo : un editor extraordinario / Mariana Masera (coordinadora).
Published Ciudad de México : Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2017.
Main (Gardner) Stacks
Z493.V36 A58 2017
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
José Guadalupe Posada : illustrator of chapbooks
Author: Mercurio López Casillas; José Guadalupe Posada
Publisher: Mexico City : Editorial RM, 2005.
Main (Gardner) Stacks
NE546.P6 A4 2005
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
Artist: Manuel Alfonso Manilla (Mexican, Mexico City, ca. 1830 – 1895, Mexico City),
A booklet cover, ca. 1885
10 x 15 cm.
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Manuel Alfonso Manilla, ca. 1830 – 1895.
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (1850–1917, Mexican) printer.
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo was born in Puebla, Mexico around 1850; in 1867 he moved to Mexico City; he later established a printing house, and before the turn of the century issued a series of small theatrical works which were put in his Galería de Teatro Infantil; some of his publications had the advantage of being illustrated by José Guadalupe Posada; between them they produced Perico el incorregible, Casa de vecindad and Celos de negro con don Folías ; Vanegas Arroyo published the journals La gaceta callejera, El boletín, El jicote, El teatro, El centavo perdido, and others; he also published the Secretario de los amantes ; he died on March 14, 1917, in Mexico City( Source:http://snaccooperative.org/ark:/99166/w6wq0k1m).
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Legends--Mexico--Juvenile literature
Emperor of Mexico Cuauhtemoc 1495?-1525--Juvenile literature
Mexico--History--Conquest, 1519-1540--Juvenile literature
Ca.1900
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913).
"The great cartoonist Posada lived through the Porfiriato years and brought a popular message to the mass of citizens who lived so miserably under the Díaz dictatorship. Although best-known for his Calavera images of whimsical skeletons, Posada lived through the early years of the Revolution and his hojas sueltas or broadsides captured much of the activity of the period: corridos to celebrate heroes and battles, or calaveras to satirize unpopular characters.
In this patriotic imagen tricolor, Posada brings back Independence to its true beginning, the 16th of September. Porfirio Diaz had merged independence celebrations with his own birthday on September 15th. Ironically, the Revolution did not do away with this Porfiriato tradition. To this day, Grito festivities, still take place on the eve of September the 16th (source: http://web.stanford.edu/~c0y0t8/celebratemexico/vivael16.html)
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Posada, José Guadalupe, ca. 1880-1910.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913).
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925.
In 1900 the Maucci Brothers, a Spanish publisher, commissioned Posada to illustrate a series of pamphlets for children on the history of Mexico. The cover illustrations are probably the only mechanically produced chromolithographs that Posada ever did.
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Writer: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca Del Niño Mexicano, a series of patriotic tales and episodes by Heriberto Frias.
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913).
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del niño mexicano. Segunda serie, ubrimientos y conquistas
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Mexico--History--Conquest, 1519-1540--Juvenile literature
Emperor of Mexico Cuauhtemoc 1495?-1525--Juvenile literature
Cortés, Hernán 1485-1547--Juvenile literature
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Emperor of Mexico Ahuízotl active 1486-1503--Juvenile literature
Tezcatlipoca (Aztec deity)--Juvenile literature
Aztecs--Rites and ceremonies--Juvenile literature
Aztecs--Religion--Juvenile literature
Mexico--History--To 1519--Juvenile literature
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Heriberto Frías was the author of Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano that was illustrated by José Guadalupe Posada.
Periodista y novelista mexicano, nacido en Querétaro (1870) y fallecido en Tizapán (1925). Entró al servicio de las armas en el IX Batallón con el grado de subteniente de infantería (1889), siendo ascendido a teniente (1892) y participando en la misión de sofocar la rebelión de los indios tomochitecos. Los acontecimientos vividos le impresionaron homdamente, por lo que escribió una serie de artículos que se publicaron en el periódico El Demócrata entre 1893 y 1895. Estos artículos se recogieron en su novela Tomochic y le originaron un proceso que pudo haberle costado la vida. Ya de baja en el ejército, se dedicó por completo al periodismo. Escribió en El mundo ilustrado (1896), El combate (1896-98), El Correo de la Tarde (1906). Dirigió diversas publicaciones (El Correo de la Tarde, La Voz de Sonora). En tiempos de Obregón, desempeñó durante tres años (1921-1923) el cargo de cónsul de México en Cádiz. Volvió a México en 1923, casi ciego pero a punto de terminar su novela El Diluvio mexicano . No pudo finazlizarla, pues la muerte le sorprendió en Tizapán. Es autor de novelas de tono social: El último duelo (1896), El amor de la sirenas (1908), ¿Águila o sol? (1923); de leyendas (Leyendas históricas mexicanas, 1899) y de obras históricas (La intervención americana).
Source: http://www.mcnbiografias.com/app-bio/do/show?key=frias-heriberto
The photo's citation: Sistema nacional de fonotecas, num.de.inv. 30938, ca. 1915.
José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Photo-relief and letterpress on tan paper
Sheet: 5 13/16 × 7 7/8 in. (14.8 × 20 cm)
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Posada, José Guadalupe, ca. 1880-1910.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Cortés, Hernán 1485-1547--Juvenile literature
Mexico--History--Conquest, 1519-1540--Juvenile literature
Emperor of Mexico Cuauhtemoc 1495?-1525--Juvenile literature
Faced with an Aztec revolt against their rule, forces under the Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes fight their way out of Tenochtitlan at the heavy cost. Known to the Spanish as La Noche Triste, or “the Night of Sadness,” many soldiers drowned in Lake Texcoco when the vessel carrying them and Aztec treasures hoarded by CortÝs sank. Montezuma II, the Aztec emperor who had become merely a subject of Cortes in the previous year, was also killed during the struggle; by the Aztecs or the Spanish, it is not known.
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
La modernidad en la Biblioteca del niño mexicano : Posada, Frías y Maucci
Author: Helia Emma Bonilla Reyna; Marie Lecouvey
Publisher: México, D.F. : Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas, 2015.
"The book is one of the first studies on a collection as publishing, literary and graphic product. It presents the saga of the Maucci Brothers, their alliances and ruptures, their work in the promotion of books. It displays the ideology assumed by (Heriberto) Frias, who combines chronicle and fantasy to arouse patriotism among young readers. It reveals the role of (José Guadalupe) Posada as an illustrator of the collection and its relationship with the printing industry of the time." (Our translation) --Verso cover.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Chromolithograph on cover designed by José Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Publishers: Maucci Hermanos .
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Casas, Bartolomé de las 1484-1566
II, Emperor of Mexico Montezuma approximately 1480-1520
Cortés, Hernán 1485-1547
Indians, Treatment of
America--Discovery and exploration--Spanish
Bartolomé de las Casas; c. 1484 – 18 July 1566) was a 16th-century Spanish colonist who acted as a historian and social reformer before becoming a Dominican friar. He was appointed as the first resident Bishop of Chiapas, and the first officially appointed "Protector of the Indians". His extensive writings, the most famous being A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies and Historia de Las Indias, chronicle the first decades of colonization of the West Indies. He described the atrocities committed by the colonizers against the indigenous peoples (source: wikipedia).
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano.
José María Teclo Morelos Pérez y Pavón was a Mexican Roman Catholic priest and revolutionary rebel leader who led the Mexican War of Independence movement, assuming its leadership after the execution of Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla in 1811.
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
This title was printed ca. 1900.
Emperor of Mexico Cuauhtemoc 1495?-1525--Assassination--Juvenile literature
Cortés, Hernán 1485-1547--Juvenile literature
Mexico--History--Conquest, 1519-1540--Juvenile literature
Legends--Mexico--Juvenile literature
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Legends--Mexico--Juvenile literature
Emperor of Mexico Cuauhtemoc 1495?-1525--Juvenile literature
Cortés, Hernán 1485-1547--Juvenile literature
Mexico--History--Conquest, 1519-1540--Juvenile literature
Coyoacán (Mexico)--History--Juvenile literature
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Mina, Francisco Javier 1789-1817
Hidalgo y Costilla, Miguel 1753-1811
Mexico--History--Wars of Independence, 1810-1821--Juvenile literature
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
The war of 1846-1848 between the United States and Mexico resulted in the disastrous loss of Mexican territories. It was a tragedy for Mexico of unprecedented proportions.
Mexican War, 1846-1848--Juvenile literature
Taylor, Zachary 1784-1850--Juvenile literature
Scott, Winfield 1786-1866--Juvenile literature
Santa Anna, Antonio López de 1794?-1876--Juvenile literature
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Author: Frias, Heriberto, 1870-1925
Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano
Chromolithograph on cover designed by Jose´ Guadalupe Posada. "Barcelona--Imp. de la Casa Editorial Maucci"--P. 16.
Mexico--History--Conquest, 1519-1540--Juvenile literature
II, Emperor of Mexico Montezuma approximately 1480-1520--Juvenile literature
Cortés, Hernán 1485-1547--Juvenile literature
Catholic Church--Mexico--Juvenile literature
Mexico--Church history--16th century--Juvenile literature
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
This Posada print, "The León Flood," is the cover image for a collection of modern songs. Type-metal engraving. Signed.
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Posada, José Guadalupe, ca. 1880-1910.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Posada, José Guadalupe, ca. 1880-1910.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Cancionero.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Posada, José Guadalupe, ca. 1880-1910.
This is an artistic catalog of the most representative work 20 years of the outstanding graphic by Sergio Sánchez Santamaría.
Artist: Sánchez Santamaría, Sergio, 1976-
Subjects
Sánchez Santamaría, Sergio, -- 1976-
Linoleum block-printing, Mexican -- 20th century.
Linoleum block-printing, Mexican -- 21st century.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual li
A linocut portrait of Zapata.
Artist: Sánchez Santamaría, Sergio, 1976-
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
A linocut of image by the artist was included in his book.
Sergio Sánchez Santamaría was born in Tlayacapan, Morelos, Mexico, in 1976. A muralist, illustrator, and printmaker, Sánchez Santamaría is the heir of the Taller de Gráfica Popular (TGP) print collective. Themes explored include Mexican traditional topics such as the Mexican Revolution, folktales, indigeneity and myth, urban and rural landscaping, Calaveras (social and political commentary), and the Day of the Dead. (Source: https://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/sanchezsantamariasergio/).
Sánchez Santamaría, Sergio, -- 1976-
Linoleum block-printing, Mexican -- 20th century.
Linoleum block-printing, Mexican -- 21st century.
Artist: Sánchez Santamaría, Sergio, 1976-
Soldado (from the series 'Pesonajes de Morelos, Mexico)
Technique
linocut
Image Size
11 13/16 x 8 1/2" image
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries.
Artist: José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913).
This chapbook is a children's story eight pages long.
For "The fortunate child" there are three illustrations: a boy encountering a magician, a boy in a hot air balloon, and two men in a row boat--the text concerns a gifted adolescent who is put through different trials by a magician and a king. He is born with the gift of invincibility because he was born on his feet. He overcomes obstacles and impossible situations. He arrives at a palace in a balloon after his trials and gains the hand of a princess and great riches. (Source: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/99615875/)
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries and archives.
Attribution:
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (Firm) - Posada, José Guadalupe, ca. 1880-1910.
This is the panel 1 of 3 that was created for this exhibition.
In the pantheon of the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century artists who represent Mexico and Mexican art, the artwork of José Guadalupe Posada stands out as a bright constellation that continues to shine the light on important stories through woodcuts, imprints, and engravings. He was born on February 2, 1852, in Aguascalientes.
Posada joined the publishing house of Antonio Vanegas Arroyo in 1888 as an illustrator and engraver. There he met Manuel Alfonso Manilla (1830-95), and, until 1899, the two men shared engraving duties. They worked so closely together that some works are hard to attribute definitively to one artist or the other. Posada worked on images that appeared in newspapers and continued to create woodcut images, with subjects ranging from news to religion. Posada also used the imagery of skulls. The skull, or la Calavera, was adopted by the artist to illustrate the hybridity of Mexican culture. It is thought that Posada was responsible for images published in over fifty Mexico City-based periodicals, some of which are held by The Bancroft Library.
There were a limited amount of postcards printed to celebrate the launch of this exhibition. The images on this postcard came from the Library of Congress.
Posada illustrated many small booklets, typically less than twenty pages long and measuring roughly nine centimeters by twelve centimeters. These small publications are known in English as chapbooks; in Spanish, they are known as Cuadernos. The chapbooks covered a variety of subjects including recipes, short stories, songs, and plays. Front covers usually were illustrated with an image related to the content of the chapbook.
Between 1899 and 1901, Posada illustrated for the Biblioteca del Niño Mexicano series — Posada’s only series that appeared in full color. There were a total of 110 chapbook-sized booklets printed. The booklets, written by Heriberto Frías, tell the history of Mexico through short fablelike stories that include Moctezuma and Aztec society before the arrival of the Spanish; the Spanish conquest and the role of the Catholic Church; and the struggle for Mexican independence.
Several contemporary artists have continued the tradition of printmaking in Mexico. Here, the curator would like to focus on two artists who due to their distinct life experiences are continuing to influence the future artists to come through their artistic creations. I chose for this exhibition some works of the following artists, Artemio Rodriguez of La Mano Press and Sergio Sánchez Santamaría, whose work is inspired by the last generation of the artists from the Taller Grafica Popular (TGP) co-founder Leopoldo Méndez (1902-1969).
The cover of the book- American Dream by Artemio Rodriguez. The second edition of this acclaimed monograph reproduces more than 200 of his intricate black-and-white linoleum prints and drawings.
RM Verlag, S.L, 2013. Print.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries.
The image may be subject to copyright.
This book was used for the exhibition.
Source: http://oskicat.berkeley.edu/record=b24726250~S1
Author/Editor: Mercurio López Casillas.
México: Editorial RM, 2013.
Fair academic use only. Posted according to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by individual libraries.
The image may be subject to copyright.
Source: http://oskicat.berkeley.edu/record=b20591022~S30
Artemio Rodriguez was born in Tacambaro, Michoacan Mexico in 1972. He began by studying agronomy at the Universidad Autonomo Chapingo and was later introduced to art when he apprenticed and learned letterpress printing from Juan Pasco, a master printmaker working out of the Taller San Martin Pescador near Rodriguez’s hometown. (source: Davidson Galleries).
Posted pursuant to section 108 of title 17 of the United States Code, §201.14: Warnings of copyright for use by certain libraries and archives.