David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974)
David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974)

Autorretrato

Details
David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974)
Autorretrato
signed and dated ‘A Siqueiros, 1934, N.Y.' (lower right)
black crayon and tempera on zinc panel
19¼ x 12½ in. (48.9 x 31.1 cm.)
Executed in 1934.
Provenance
Acquired from the artist.
B. Lewin Galleries, Palm Springs.
Private collection, New York.
Galería Ramis Barquet, New York.
Anon. sale, Christie's, New York, 28 May 2003, lot 11 (illustrated in color).
Private collection, New York (acquired from the above).
Literature
X. Moyssén, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Pintura de Caballete, Mexico City, Fondo Editorial de la Plástica Mexicana, 1994, p. 3 (illustrated in color).
Exhibition catalogue, Siqueiros por Siqueiros, Mexico City, Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, 1996, no. 5 (illustrated in color).
Exhibition catalogue, Portrait of a Decade: David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1930-1940, Mexico City, Museo Nacional de Arte, Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1997, p. 167, no. 64 (illustrated).
Exhibition catalogue, The Latin Century: Beyond the Border, Roslyn Harbor, Nassau County Museum of Art, 2002, p. 62 (illustrated).


Exhibited
Monterrey, Biblioteca Central de la Universidad de Monterrey, David Alfaro Siqueiros: Compulsivamente YO: Autorretrato, September-October 1994.
Mexico City, Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, Siqueiros por Siqueiros, 1996, no. 5.
Mexico City, Museo Nacional de Arte, Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, Portrait of a Decade: David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1930-1940, 18 November 1996-22 July 1997, no. 64. This exhibition also travelled to Santa Barbara, California, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, 8 March-11 May 1997 and Houston, The Museum of Fine Arts, 1 June-22 July 1997.
Roslyn Harbor, Nassau County Museum of Art, The Latin Century: Beyond the Border, 18 August-3 November 2002, no. 106.002.2.



Lot Essay

We are grateful to Prof. Irene Herner for her assistance cataloguing this work.


This outstanding self-portrait is painted in alternating tones of black and white, the colors associated with newsprint. A series of scattered patches of white paint along the face add contouring while suggesting the visual effects of blackness with a few scattered rays of light penetrating through the somber background. The head is depicted as a seemingly solid sculptural mass whose contours and features further underscore a sense of structure and volume. Painted from a three-quarter profile, it recalls such other works from the 1930s, as Portrait of Moisés Sáenz (1930) as well as his more sculptural self-portraits from 1936 and 1939. Of note also is the massive head of curly locks rendered through the application of small brushstrokes.

Here the artist views himself through painting and projects a serene countenance that contrasts greatly with his circumstances at the time. Siqueiros had just arrived in New York City from Buenos Aires en route to Mexico after a two year exile from his homeland. He had recently separated from his great love Blanca Luz Brum, the Argentine poet whom he had married in 1932 in Los Angeles. Thus Siqueiros found himself alone, undocumented, and financially strapped. Yet despite the adversity of this moment, his determination prevailed and he responded defiantly by writing the manifesto—Towards the Transformation of the Visual Arts. In this bold manifesto, Siqueiros invites fellow artists who sympathize with the U.S. Communist Party to organize a massive workshop of experimental public art devoted to protest and propagating powerful images that oppose fascism and the impending war in Europe.

In 1936, the artist returned to New York and opened the Siqueiros Experimental Workshop on Fourteenth Street. In keeping with his political views, the Workshop was dedicated to making antifascist propaganda and endorsing the presidential candidacy of the U. S. Communist Party’s leader Earl Browder. It was against this backdrop that Siqueiros painted two spectacular self-portraits, Self-Portrait from 1936 (and an accompanying lithograph) and Self Portrait with Mirror (1937) (whereabouts currently unknown) in which he affirmed his identity as a sculptural painter (esculto-pintor) credited for having introduced innovative pictorial strategies derived from mass media practices as well as materials and techniques employed in the auto industry into the realm of painting.

Dr. Irene Herner, Professor, School of Political and Social Sciences, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City

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