José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913).
Stanford Curator of Latin Americana, Adan Griego writes, "Posada lived through the almost uninterrupted 30 years of the Porfirio Diaz dictatorship or porfiriato and his calavera images became the venue to satirize the excesses of Mexican bourgeois society. French artist Jean Charlot encountered Posada’s work while visiting Mexican muralist Diego Rivera in the 1920s and is credited with providing a wider audience for the satirical artist."
The source of this image is Stanford Library.
http://library.stanford.edu/blogs/stanford-libraries-blog/2017/10/jose-guadalupe-posada-dia-de-muertos
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). This broadsheet depicts the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe that surrounded by the leaves of the maguey agave. The bottom half of this broadsheet shows a sort of farewell hymn that pilgrims are supposed to chant while visiting and then leaving the church (Tierno despedimento que hacen los visitantes...).
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).
Colección de canciones modernas para año 1892.
Vanegas Arroyo typography released each year a songbook of modern songs. This songbook for the year 1892 depicts on its cover a character named Elena. This songbook is produced using the photo-relief and letterpress method. Printed in red and black on tan paper
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).
Cover for 'Las Torres Blancas', a group of people walking and looking up at two white towers (Source: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/738082).
Photo-relief and letterpress in red and black ink on tan paper.
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)
A cover of a songbook for the year 1895. The cover shows an Asian woman who is holding a traditional fan (el abanico).
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).
The cover of a songbook for the year 1894 depicts a lady who is dancing. Her name is printed as "Serpentina".
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.
José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913)
Broadside shows a male skeleton dressed in a charro outfit wielding a machete in a graveyard, apparently in the process of creating more skeletons--a crowd of skeletons surrounds him and skulls lie at his feet. The text block is decorated with four small skulls.
(Source: Library of Congress-https://www.loc.gov/pictures/resource/ppmsc.03450/)
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).
Shows Francisco I. Madero riding on the horse. With Zapata standing by his side holding the flag of Mexico. It belongs to the broadsheets category of Posada's print.
Francisco Madero rose to become the most popular contender to the presidency of Porfirio Díaz. As the 1910 elections drew near, Díaz imprisoned Madero and won re-election for his eighth term. Following the election Madero escaped from prison and fled to Texas where he plotted a revolution. In early 1911 he re-entered Mexico at Ciudad Juárez, took command of the revolutionary armies, and swiftly progressed in a grand march across Mexico. His triumphal entry into the capital was celebrated with vigorous exaltation.
Image source: https://www.ebay.com/itm/Jose-Guadalupe-Posada-Original-Engraving-GRAN-MARCHA-TRIUNFAL-/153160148194
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.
José Guadalupe Posada (Mexican, 1851–1913).
The image to the left is the way Posada's workshop looked about 1899. It is one of two photo images we have of the artist. Posada is on the right and it is generally agreed that the young man is Posada's son Juan Sabino Posada Vela who died in 1900. In our search for Posada we now believe that we know the identity of the third person in the photo. In the image below we see historians Agustín Sánchez González and Helia Emma Bonilla Reyna in front of the workshop as it is today. It is about three blocks from Mexico City's zocolo.
Source: Posada Art Foundation, San Francisco.
https://curator-jgposada.blogspot.com/2013/02/searching-for-posada-his-workshop-on.html
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:
The Posada Art Foundation, San Francisco, California.
Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (1850?-1917) ran a printing house that issued a series of small theatrical works which were put in his Galería de Teatro Infantil. Some of his publications were illustrated by José Guadalupe Posada. (Source: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4t1nb894/)
The editor is standing in the center between two individuals. Seating in the front row from the left to right are Concepción Vanegas Rubí, Carmen Rubí, and Julia Vanegas Rubí.
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, andanzas de un editor popular (1880-1901) By Jaddiel Díaz Frene, Ángel Cedeño Vanegas