Conversations with Diego Rivera. Alfredo Cardona Peña

Conversations with Diego Rivera - Alfredo Cardona Peña


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      image ENDORSEMENTS

      Three months after I arrived from Guatemala to study in La Esmeralda, with a scholarship from the democratic government, I was asked to work as an assistant on Diego Rivera’s mural Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Central Park. Diego was starting the mural in the Hotel del Prado where the famous phrase “God does not exist” scandalized Mexico.

      A year after, I was able to assist the genius in “his labyrinth” and to listen to the corpulent maestro dressed in denim overalls speak to Alfredo Cardona Peña. We called the writer jucjhitico, for having been married to a beautiful woman from Juchitan, Oaxaca, and tico for being from Costa Rica, one of the most beautiful places in Central America.

      The union of these talented men allowed Alfredo Cardona Peña to capture in this book—with sarcasm, knowledge, wisdom, and ingenuity—anecdotes and experiences of Diego’s artistic, intellectual, and political life in Mexico and the world. I witnessed the birth of this book take place in front of a picture window in the maestro’s beautiful studio in San Angel, through which a green-yellow foliage peeked, Diego Rivera’s favorite color, and mixed with the Congo-green of the floor. In this ambiance, I heard the writer ask targeted questions. I was still very young, enjoying and learning by listening, while I discretely muffled a smile.

      —Rina Lazo, painter and last living student of Diego Rivera

      When Rina painted the mural The Four Elements, the critics applauded her … even the painters. Needless to say, Diego saw her as the apple of his eye

      —María Luisa, La China Mendoza

      “If art is not made, there is a danger of death,” Diego Rivera tells us in this splendid book, which is itself a powerful argument for life, and for the kinds of vital, authentic art without which fully human lives are impossible. These pages are practically bursting with Rivera’s colossal genius, and his words, reaching us only now in English after almost 70 years, are as necessary today as they were in 1950. Read this book; your heart, your soul, and your mind will all thank you for it.

      —Ben Fountain, author of Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk, winner of the National Book Critics’ Circle Award and finalist for the National Book Award

      This book is a marvelous stroll with Mexican artist Diego Rivera, a gift offered by Alfredo Cardona Peña with empathy, intelligence, and an infinite curiosity for Mexico—its indigenous and popular culture, art as propaganda, and painting as boundless energy. Rivera is rendered in full flesh: combative, keen, urgent and vital.

      —Gabriel Trujillo Muñoz, author of Mezquite Road

      The appearance in English of these wide-ranging and brilliant interviews of Mexico’s greatest painter, Diego Rivera, by Alfredo Cordona Peña is a triumph for all who wish to understand the Mexican master. In this case, the writer was respected so much by the artist that the results are a kind of dance between two equals. The elegant translation by the writer’s brother, Alvaro Cardona-Hine, is an act of homage that makes these interviews, known to every scholar of Rivera’s work in Spanish, accessible to a wider audience in English. The resulting text is very much like Paul Gauguin’s wide-ranging last book, Avant et Après, and a book less about art than about history, art history, aesthetics, politics, literature, the art market, and memory. It is filled with surprising stories, fiercely held opinions, and a kind of intellectual swagger perfectly captured in its subtitle “The Monster in his Labyrinth”

      —Richard R. Brettell, PhD, Founding Director, the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History and the Margaret McDermott Distinguished Chair, the University of Texas at Dallas

      CONVERSATIONS with DIEGO RIVERA

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      CONVERSATIONS with DIEGO RIVERA

      THE MONSTER IN HIS LABYRINTH

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      by Alfredo Cardona Peña

      A translation by Alvaro Cardona-Hine of El Monstruo en su Laberinto

      New Village Press • New York

      Copyright © 2018 by New Village Press.

      Copyright © 1965, 1980 by Alfredo Cardona Peña.

      All Rights Reserved

      Except for brief portions quoted for purposes of review, no part of this book may be reprinted, reproduced or utilized in any medium now known or hereafter invented without permission in writing from the publisher. The publisher gratefully acknowledges the permissions granted by the Author’s Heirs, Cora Cardona and Barbara McCauley Cardona, to publish this work.

      Published in the United States by

      New Village Press

      [email protected]

       www.newvillagepress.net

      New Village Press is a public-benefit, not-for-profit publisher.

      Distributed by New York University Press

       newvillagepress.nyupress.org

      Paperback ISBN-13: 978-1-61332-032-7

      Publication Date: July 9, 2018

      First English Edition

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Cardona Peäna, Alfredo, interviewer. | Rivera, Diego, 1886-1957, interviewee. | Cardona-Hine, Alvaro, translator. | Translation of: Cardona Peäna, Alfredo. Monstruo en su laberinto.

      Title: Conversations with Diego Rivera : the monster in his labyrinth / by Alfredo Cardona Peäna ; a translation by Alvaro Cardona-Hine of El monstruo en su laberinto.

      Other titles: Monstruo en su laberinto. English

      Description: First English edition. | New York : New Village Press, 2018.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2018013868| ISBN 9781613320327 (pbk.) | ISBN 9781613320297 (hardcover)

      Subjects: LCSH: Rivera, Diego, 1886-1957—Interviews. | Painters—Mexico—Interviews.

      Classification: LCC ND259.R5 A35 2018 | DDC 759.972—dc 3

      LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018013868

      Front cover photo: Diego Rivera in his studio, July 30, 1950, Diego Rivera (III), c.1949 (gelatin silver print), Alvarez Bravo, Lola (1907–93) / Detroit Institute of Arts, USA / Founders Society Purchase, Diego Rivera Exhibition Fund / Bridgeman Images

      Frontispiece: Diego Rivera and Alfredo Cardona Peña, July 30, 1950, by Lola Alvarez Bravo, courtesy Cora Cardona.

      Page 159: Diego Rivera, Young Boy with a Bucket, 1934, by permission of Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum. Dark gray watercolor on cream rice paper; 39 × 28 cm (15⅜ × 11 in.) Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Gift of Louis W. Black, 1955 © Diego Rivera / Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo: Imaging Department © President and Fellows of Harvard College

      Cover design: Lynne Elizabeth

      Interior design and composition: Leigh McLellan

      image CONTENTS

       Translator’s Preface

      


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