Diego Riveras Work at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in California
"I have seen information technology and believe it is a really great work — technically beyond anything Rivera had previously done…. In intensity of symbolic images, complexity and depth of idea he is of course here going into something much more profound than anything he has previously attempted." Dr. Grace McCann Morley, founding managing director, San Francisco Museum of Art, in a letter to Art Digest, Dec 1940
SAN FRANCISCO, CA (JUNE 24, 2021) — A projection four years in the making, the San Francisco Museum of Modernistic Art (SFMOMA) today announced the public opening of Diego Rivera'southward largest portable fresco mural, Pan American Unity, on June 28, 2021, at ane p.yard. On loan from City College of San Francisco (CCSF) and one of the most of import works of public art the city, the mural will exist displayed in the museum's complimentary-to-visit street-level Roberts Family Gallery. This exhibition is the culmination of four years of extensive investigation, research and preparation that brought together SFMOMA, CCSF, scientists at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), an international team of conservators, Diego Rivera scholars, and Atthowe Fine art Services, a local expert on fine art moving and rigging. These teams explored the engineering, conservation and scientific requirements for moving such a monumental, historic and fragile work of art. A comprehensive program of on-site conservation, public teaching and talks volition accompany the mural as well as the upcoming exhibition Diego Rivera'due south America, which will open up in summer 2022. Generous funding for these initiatives has been provided in part by Bank of America, the Koret Foundation and numerous individual donors.
Diego Rivera's The Matrimony of the Creative Expression of the North and of the South on the Continent, more than ordinarily known every bit Pan American Unity, was created in 1940 every bit part of the Art in Action exhibition at the Gilded Gate International Exposition (GGIE) on San Francisco's Treasure Island, where local and international artists created works of painting, sculpture, mosaic, textiles, ceramics, prints, metalwork and woodcarving before a rapt audience. The landscape, measuring 22 feet loftier by 74 feet wide and comprised of ten fresco panels, is the largest portable landscape created by Rivera, and his last fabricated in the United States. Rich in symbolism and imagery from beyond the North American continent, including Mexico, the United States and Canada, Pan American Unity has been on view in the Diego Rivera Theater on the main campus of CCSF since 1961. In 2023, the mural will return to CCSF to be installed in a new Performing Arts Center on its main campus.
"With its themes of collaboration and commonality between Mexico and the United States, the celebration of the creative spirit, and as a visual gift to San Francisco as we sally from the pandemic, I could not exist prouder to bring Pan American Unity to our complimentary-of-charge Roberts Family Gallery at SFOMA," said Neal Benezra, Helen and Charles Schwab Manager of SFMOMA. "I am so grateful to City College for loaning the states this historic artwork. This would not have been possible without the passionate work of our museum staff and the local and international teams that worked diligently and brilliantly for years to realize this project. We accept also had very generous support from the many sponsors and friends of the mural who have made the projection possible. I have long thought of Pan American Unity equally the greatest work of public art in San Francisco that very few people have had the opportunity to feel. Now visitors to SFMOMA will take a chance to linger in our gallery, drinkable in Rivera'due south amazing vision, and engage deeply with themes and images that still resonate strongly today."
"Today symbolizes a truthful institutional partnership, and a delivery to disinterestedness," said Shanell Williams, President of Urban center College's Board of Trustees. "SFMOMA and CCSF are two of the city's most indelible institutions in the public interest, and the transformative power of fine art and teaching will come together in this visionary presentation of Diego Rivera's Pan American Unity. "The sharing and brandish of this mural for all to experience represents Urban center College'southward historical actions to proceed working towards a more just and equitable guild."
Moving Pan American Unity to SFMOMA
The Pan American Unity partnership betwixt SFMOMA and CCSF was appear in 2017. In early 2018, an international consortium of fresco experts, Rivera scholars, SFMOMA and CCSF staff, and scientists from the National Democratic University of Mexico (UNAM) convened in United mexican states Urban center to study existing Rivera murals and to formulate an approach to move the 10-panel fresco, which weighs over 60,000 pounds and covers nearly 1,800 square feet. Equally the mural was embedded in a 12-inch-thick concrete wall in the Diego Rivera Theater at CCSF since 1961, the project came with unique challenges and constraints.
It took the museum and an international team of experts three years to do the research, testing and preparation necessary to motion such a fragile and historic object, including a year lost to the COVID-19 pandemic and shelter-in-place mandate. In summertime 2019, scientists from UNAM and experts in fresco conservation, led by Kiernan Graves of Sight & Studio Conservation, came to San Francisco to begin preliminary research on the mural. These investigations included ultraviolet and loftier magnification photography and surface condition mapping of the landscape, too as removal of core samples of concrete from the wall in which the mural was embedded. Since there were no "equally-congenital" plans for the mural installation in 1961, these holes enabled the teams to study how the mural was attached to the wall. The teams were profoundly aided by two images of the landscape created by Cultural Heritage Imaging (CHI). CHI used photogrammetry to transform about two,500 50-megapixel photographs of the landscape'south surface into a 3D model of the fresco. Using the same engineering science as aerial map makers, CHI used the 3D model to produce a 2D orthomosaic picture of the mural's color, and a Digital Elevation Model to show the shape of the relief impressions on the landscape'south surface. In add-on to tracking condition issues on the mural, the map helped conservators track Rivera's giornata—the boundary lines of the moisture plaster area Rivera was able to paint in one day—and the progression of his work beyond the mural. The team could also rails pentimento, where Rivera repainted an expanse on summit of an added layer of fresh plaster.
With this baseline information, SFMOMA partnered with Prof. Alejandro Ramirez and the Center for Mechanical Design and Technological Innovation at UNAM to develop the best strategies to safely motility the mural. They created two full-sized replica panels and subjected them to vibration and torque testing in their lab to generate a database of stress impact on the landscape. Using this data, they created a system of sensors affixed to the mural's surface, which allowed the UNAM team to monitor the panels in real time during the extraction and move across San Francisco and to ensure they were subjected to equally little stress every bit possible.
Extraction of the first panel by Atthowe Fine Art Services and Sheedy Drayage began in April 2021 and the starting time panel arrived at the museum May 2. After each panel was extracted from the 12-inch-thick concrete wall, it was mounted in a new steel frame and encased in a protective travel frame featuring custom wire rope isolators for farther reduction of vibration and jolting. Each panel was and so trucked across San Francisco at 5 MPH at 4 a.m. on a series of Sunday mornings. The concluding 2 panels arrived on Sunday, June 20.
In the Roberts Family Gallery at SFMOMA, the landscape panels are attached to a steel construction that offers both stability and a versatile mounting system, allowing Pan American Unity to exist safely moved and displayed again in the future. This system will be replicated when the mural is displayed at the new Performing Arts Center at CCSF.
History of Pan American Unity
At the invitation of noted architect Timothy Pflueger, Diego Rivera journeyed to San Francisco to participate in the Art in Action program in the Palace of Fine Arts during the 1940 season of the Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island. Fairgoers were invited to watch artists create work in a Pan Am Clipper airplane hangar converted into a working studio and gallery. Rivera and his assistants began in June 1940 and completed the mural in December, two months subsequently the close of the Exposition. Over 30,000 visitors viewed the landscape during a preview and a public viewing.
At the aforementioned time, Pflueger was working to build the campus of San Francisco Inferior College (now City College of San Francisco). Together he and Rivera agreed the landscape would exist permanently displayed in a new 1000 Library on the campus. But considering of the ban on nonessential structure during World War II and Pflueger'due south unexpected expiry, the Grand Library was never constructed. Controversy regarding Rivera'south communist politics during the McCarthy era further delayed the fresco'southward installation at the college. For 20 years it languished in storage until Milton Pflueger, Timothy'due south blood brother, proposed to the San Francisco School Board that the landscape exist installed in the foyer of the college'due south new theater. He redesigned the vestibule and installed the mural, making it accessible to the public in 1961. The building was renamed the Diego Rivera Theater in honour of the artist in 1993.
SFMOMA's history with Rivera includes 17 solo and grouping exhibitions. His work The Flower Carrier was one of the first paintings to enter the collection in 1935 equally a souvenir from founding trustee Albert Bough, and SFMOMA'southward collection of 76 works past the artist includes paintings, drawings and sketches. Through his friendship with Bender, Rivera obtained a visa to journey to San Francisco to paint murals at the San Francisco Stock Exchange (now City Club) and the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute). SFMOMA's founding director Dr. Grace McCann Morley helped with Rivera'due south return to create Pan American Unity. Side by side year, Pan American Unity volition serve as the concluding chapter of SFMOMA's exhibition Diego Rivera's America, opening summer 2022.
Mural Content and Themes
"For years I have felt that the existent art of the Americas must come as a result of the fusion of the machinism and new artistic ability of the north with the tradition rooted in the soil of the southward, the Toltecs, Tarascans, Mayas, Incas, etc., and would like to cull that equally the subject area of my mural." Diego Rivera in a letter to Timothy Pflueger, April 1940
Using fresco techniques in the manner of Italian Renaissance painters, but updating its themes and reimagining its social function, Rivera created a mural consisting of ten steel-framed panels that allowed private sections to exist transported and relocated later the close of the GGIE. Four panels on the lower row are discrete scenes, with the pinnacle five panels and the lower center panel forming a continuous view featuring one of Rivera's about dynamic montage narratives.
"My mural will picture the fusion between the great past of the Latin American lands, as information technology is securely rooted in the soil, and the high mechanical developments of the United states of america," described Rivera. Pan American Unity features a sweeping panorama of the Bay Expanse, which connects arcadian scenes of pre-Conquest cities of the Valley of United mexican states City (left side) with depictions of the development of Northern California (right side). Rivera'south imagery extends from ancient civilizations (Toltec, Aztec) to Bay Area architectural icons (the Golden Gate Span, 450 Sutter, 140 Montgomery, Alcatraz). Rivera also incorporated electric current events, besides equally references to his previous murals and artworks. In a lower panel, Rivera references scenes from Hollywood movies such equally The Great Dictator and Confessions of a Nazi Spy to bring sensation to the rising threat of fascism and encourage the The states to join World War II.
The mural centers on a towering effigy that combines a sculpture of the Aztec earth goddess Coatlicue with modern machinery. Effectually this syncretic symbol, he depicts many notable gimmicky and historical figures from across the continent and across time: inventors and their inventions (the 15th-century ruler of Texcoco Nezahualcoyotl besides as Samuel Morse, Robert Fulton, Henry Ford), political figures both heroic and villainous (Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Simón Bolívar, Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, Joseph Stalin, Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler), artists and architects (Frida Kahlo, sculptors Mardonio Magaña and Dudley Carter, Timothy Pflueger, and Rivera himself) and actors (Paulette Goddard, Charlie Chaplin and Edward G. Robinson). The mural also features a cantankerous section of the creative pursuits of everyday people, including athletes, scientists, artisans and Rivera'south administration and visitors he met at the GGIE.
Visit world wide web.riveramural.org for additional information on Pan American Unity from CCSF.
Mural Conservation on Weekdays
Offering a special backside-the-scenes opportunity to visitors, conservators from SFMOMA and Site & Studio Conservation will continue surface conservation on the mural on weekdays during the month of July, and the public is welcome to find. The schedule of daily conservator talks will be posted in the Roberts Family Gallery.
Public Programs for Pan American Unity
Mini Landscape Festival
In 1940, more than 65 artists including Diego Rivera fabricated their artistic processes public when they participated in Art in Activeness as part of the Golden Gate International Exposition. Taking inspiration from this historical connection, the Mini Mural Festival invites local organizations to committee artists to paint modest-scale murals live in the outdoor corridor adjacent to the Roberts Family Gallery. Each weekend will exist hosted by festival partners with music, motion and other activities that celebrate each of the organizations' communities. The three murals—eight square feet each—volition be displayed at the museum through the autumn and so returned to our festival partners.
July 31–August 1: Acción Latina
DJ Agana and Josué Rojas
August 14–xv: NIAD Fine art Center
Andres Cisneros-Galindo, Nan Collymore, Christian Vassell, Miguel Chacon, Julio Del Rio, Luis Estrada, Deatra Colbert and Esmeralda Silva
Baronial 28–29: SOMA Pilipinas
Franceska Gamez and Malaya Tuyay
About the Mini Mural Partners
Acción Latina builds healthy and empowered Latinx communities in the San Francisco Bay Area through cultural arts, customs media and civic appointment. They document and celebrate the diverse cultural history of Latinx communities past publishing the award-winning bilingual newspaper El Tecolote and producing rich cultural arts programs such as the annual social justice concert Encuentro del Canto Popular, the community-curated arts experience Paseo Artístico and the Juan R. Fuentes Gallery.
For well-nigh forty years, NIAD Art Heart has provided a gimmicky visual arts program in their downtown Richmond studio and galleries for a community of seventy studio artists with intellectual and developmental disabilities and twenty-two staff members. NIAD's visual arts programs provide participating artists the time and space to make work, cloth and art marketing resources and didactics and learning opportunities they need to maintain thriving contemporary practices.
SOMA Pilipinas is San Francisco's Filipino Cultural Heritage District. Spanning i.5 square miles, information technology honors the 120+ year history of Filipinos in San Francisco, and celebrates the community's living legacy of making home, celebrating civilisation, edifice community and fighting for economic and racial justice in the rapidly gentrifying Due south of Market place neighborhood. It connects the broader community to their stories as Filipinos in America and a living culture and community that's conscious of history, yet embraces progress, working together and moving forward in unity and vision.
Other Public Programs for Pan American Unity
New Territory: Beyond the The states/Mexico Border
A border is a line of separation, an edge and a boundary that divides countries, state, and people. The line is imaginary, drawn and redrawn by history and conflict. This public plan series explores the relationship between art, design and the Us/Mexico border as a new territory, a region onto itself, with its own communities and connections. Including artists and designers from several exhibitions on view at the museum this fall, this talk series will explore Rivera's vision and the impact of Pan Americanism on art and culture today; the art and politics backside the piece of work of creative person Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, including his large-calibration participatory art installation Border Tuner (2019); an expansive conversation nigh the Two Sides of the Border projection by Tatiana Bilbao and Rael San Fratello's Teeter Totter Wall; a reexamination of Californian and Mexican landscape photography; and a roundtable of contemporary artists from Tijuana.
Pan Americanism: Past and Present
September ix, 2021, 4 p.m. PST online
Costless and open up to the public
Participants:
Maria Castro, banana curator of painting and sculpture, SFMOMA
Claire F. Fox, associate professor in the departments of English and of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Iowa and author of Making Art Panamerican: Cultural Policy and the Cold War
Eamon Ore-Giron, visual artist
Juana Alicia, visual artist, muralist, educator, activist and painter
Artist Talk: Rafael Lozano-Hemmer
September 30, 2021, 6 p.m. PST, Phyllis Wattis Theater and online
Free and open up to the public
Architecture and Design at the Border: Tatiana Bilbao and Ron Rael with Ersela Kripa
November 4, 2021, vi p.yard. PST, Phyllis Wattis Theater and online
Free and open to the public
New California Mural
Date and time to be appear
Free and open to the public
Contemporary Artists from Tijuana
Date and time to exist appear
Complimentary and open up to the public
CCSF Partnership
SFMOMA'southward Public Appointment department has partnered with City College of San Francisco to promote greater understanding and appreciation of the Pan American Unity mural through a faculty-led curriculum development grouping and a lecture series. A multidisciplinary group of CCSF instructors volition pattern and nowadays lesson plans related to the mural, providing a shareable evergreen resource for higher and academy instructors. In addition, SFMOMA and CCSF are co-hosting twice-yearly lectures, geared towards students just open to the public, featuring contemporary artists inspired by Diego Rivera. Select CCSF students will too participate in hands-on workshops with the artists.
Sound Guide
In the exhibition'southward audio guide, muralist Juana Alicia Araiza, scholar Monica Bravo, artist and activist Sarah Biscarra Dilley and historian Volition Maynez reflect on Diego Rivera'southward iconic mural Pan American Unity. Available on the free SFMOMA App and online here.
Mural and Exhibition Sponsors
Presenting support for Pan American Unity is provided past Sir Deryck and Lady Va Maughan, Helen and Charles Schwab, Pat Wilson, and anonymous donors.
Major support is provided by Doris Fisher, Randi and Bob Fisher, the Koret Foundation, Diana Nelson and John Atwater, The Bernard Osher Foundation, and Sanford Robertson.
Generous back up is provided past the Breyer Family Foundation, Katherine Harbin Clammer and Adam Clammer, Roberta and Steve Denning, Jean and James East. Douglas, Jr., and John and Ali Walecka. Boosted support is provided by Mary Leonard Robinson and Susan Swig.
Funding for the conservation of Pan American Unity was generously provided through a grant from the Bank of America Art Conservation Project.
SFMOMA is grateful to the following sponsors who have lent their support to the overall project of Diego Rivera's America, including the upcoming exhibition.
The presenting sponsors are Bank of America and the Evelyn D. Haas Exhibition Fund
Major back up is provided by BART, Cumulus Media, Doris Fisher, Randi and Bob Fisher, the Lisa and Douglas Goldman Fund, the Walter & Elise Haas Fund, the Mary Jo and Dick Kovacevich Family unit Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Generous back up is provided by Jessica and Matt Farron, Linda and Jon Gruber, Juxtapoz Magazine, Mod Luxury, Deborah and Kenneth Novack, Mary Leonard Robinson, Nancy and Alan Schatzberg, and Margaret 5. B. Wurtele.
Meaningful back up is provided by the Robert Lehman Foundation.
About City College of San Francisco
For more than 86 years, City College of San Francisco (CCSF) has been the region's premiere public, ii-yr community college. The college was one of the start in the nation to offer complimentary tuition, providing San Franciscans with the opportunity to access an exceptional college education. Since its founding in 1935, City College has evolved into a multicultural, multi-campus community college serving the educational needs of a diversity of learners. CCSF offers more than than 300 degrees and certificates and an award-winning athletics plan. www.ccsf.edu
Almost SFMOMA
San Francisco Museum of Modernistic Art
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is i of the largest museums of mod and contemporary art in the Us and a thriving cultural heart for the Bay Area. Our remarkable collection of painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, design and media arts is housed in an LEED Gold-certified building designed by the global architects Snøhetta and Mario Botta. In addition to our seven gallery floors, SFMOMA offers 45,000 square feet of free, art-filled public space open to all.
Visit sfmoma.org or telephone call 415.357.4000 for more information.
** Follow usa on Twitter for updates and announcements: @SFMOMA_Press
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Clara Hatcher Baruth, chatcher@SFMOMA.org , 415.357.4177
Maria Wiles, mwiles@sfmoma.org , 415.357.4170
Rosie Zepeda/CCSF, rzepeda@ccsf.edu, 408.460.4282
Source: https://www.sfmoma.org/press-release/diego-rivera-pan-american-unity/
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