La Huelga de 50,000 Trabajadores (The Strike of 50,000 Workers)

Alberto Beltrán

Object Label

The Taller de Gráfica Popular (or the People’s Print Workshop) was established in 1937 in Mexico City by artists Raúl Anguiano (1915–2006), Luis Arenal (1908–1985), Leopoldo Méndez (1902–1969), and Pablo O’Higgins (1904–1983) and was open to applicants from all social classes and backgrounds. Elizabeth Catlett and Charles White, two U.S.-based artists featured in this exhibition, made use of the workshop in the 1940s.

The stated purpose of the workshop was to disseminate affordable prints with messages of political empowerment by giving artists the tools to create graphic images. These images have been used to educate the rural working class about the political and cultural gains of the Mexican Revolution, the power of solidarity across causes, and rallying antiimperialist, anti-fascist, and prolabor sentiment, among many other issues.

Caption

Alberto Beltrán (Mexican, 1923–2002). La Huelga de 50,000 Trabajadores (The Strike of 50,000 Workers), ca. 1955. Relief print, 8 11/16 x 13 1/4 in. (22.1 x 33.7 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Bequest of Richard J. Kempe, 2003.41.24.

Gallery

Not on view

Title

La Huelga de 50,000 Trabajadores (The Strike of 50,000 Workers)

Date

ca. 1955

Medium

Relief print

Classification

Print

Dimensions

8 11/16 x 13 1/4 in. (22.1 x 33.7 cm)

Credit Line

Bequest of Richard J. Kempe

Accession Number

2003.41.24

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