About Diego Rivera
Diego Rivera was born on December 8, 1886, in Guanajuato, Mexico, and died on November 24, 1957.
A Mexican painter, he established a new iconography based on socialist ideologies and Mexico's indigenous and popular heritage.
Rivera was a central figure in the Mexican Muralist movement , working alongside peers José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros. His path to that identity was circuitous: in 1907 he traveled to Europe, studying briefly in Madrid before settling in Paris, where he befriended a group of international artists associated with the School of Paris.
Initially his work was heavily influenced by Cubism — he met Picasso in 1914 — but only a few years later his style changed, and inspired by the work of Cézanne he began making Post-Impressionist paintings using simple shapes and vivid colors. The decisive turn came when Rivera traveled to Italy in 1920–21 to study frescoes, and the monumental schemes of Renaissance wall painting had a formative impact on his conception of public art when he returned to Mexico in 1921.
Rivera developed his own native style based on large, simplified figures and bold colors with an Aztec influence clearly present , and he quickly became the defining voice of Mexican Muralism. He began a series of frescoes in 1922 focused on Mexican society and the country's revolutionary past — "Ballad of the Proletarian Revolution" — completing over 120 frescoes covering more than 5,200 square feet in Mexico City's Secretariat of Public Education building. His ambitions grew to an international scale: between 1922 and 1953 Rivera painted murals in Mexico City, Chapingo, and Cuernavaca, as well as San Francisco, Detroit, and New York City, and in 1931 a retrospective of his works was held at the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan.
Between 1932 and 1933, he completed a major commission — twenty-seven fresco panels entitled *Detroit Industry* — on the walls of an inner court at the Detroit Institute of Arts. His *Man at the Crossroads* mural at Rockefeller Center became one of art history's most notorious controversies:
About this work
Two figures lie beneath the soil — still, draped in crimson, their bodies composing themselves back into the earth with the serenity of the long-dead. Above them, the land erupts upward: a radiant sunflower rises powerfully against a backdrop of fertile earth and burgeoning plants, likely maize, representing agricultural sustenance.
The two lifeless figures rest in shallow graves, their vibrant red shrouds symbolizing the blood they shed — their peaceful composure contrasting with the robust vitality above, suggesting their sacrifices have nourished the land. The palette moves in two registers: the warm ochre and sienna of the underground against the luminous greens and golds of the living surface. Rivera's compositional logic is unmistakable — death does not terminate the cycle; it initiates it.
*The Blood of the Revolutionary Martyrs Fertilizing the Earth* was created by Diego Rivera between 1926 and 1927 as a fresco, and is prominently displayed at the Chapingo Autonomous University in Texcoco, Mexico. The two buried figures are agrarian leaders Emiliano Zapata and Otilio Montaño, to whom Rivera dedicated the entire Chapingo cycle, expressing the nobility of their sacrifice and the duality between life and death, social revolution and natural revolution.
Together, Zapata and Montaño — the guerrilla leader and his intellectual mentor, a rural schoolteacher — had drafted the Plan of Ayala, the foundational proclamation of the Zapatista movement.
Rivera dedicated the Chapingo ensemble to these fallen agrarian leaders, and in developing its composition he drew inspiration from Italian Renaissance murals, giving an almost religious, biblical quality to the subject of the exploitation of the earth.
Rivera began painting these murals in 1924 and completed them around 1927 — simultaneously, working at Chapingo and at the Secretariat of Public Education, applying the technique of fresco throughout.
This is a painting for a viewer who wants weight on the wall — not decoration but argument. The underground palette of rust and earth makes it unexpectedly at home in spaces with warm plaster, natural wood, or linen upholstery, while the vertical surge of the sunflower prevents any reading of the image as mournful. It belongs in a room where ideas are permitted: a library, a study, a dining room where conversation lasts past dessert. The overarching theme Rivera gave the Chapingo cycle is a "song to the land," with agrarian revolution at its center — and that devotion, rendered here at the intimate scale of a print rather than the monumental scale of a chapel wall, loses none of its conviction. What Rivera believed about sacrifice, growth, and political memory is here in every brushstroke.