Aurora Reyes Flores
{{short description|Mexican painter and muralist (1908–1985)}}
{{Infobox artist
| name = Aurora Reyes-Flores
| image = AuroraReyesFinal creditos.webm
| caption = Interview with author Hector Godoy about the artist (in Spanish)
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1908|09|09}}
| birth_place = Hidalgo del Parral
| death_date = {{death date and age|1985|04|26|1908|09|09}}
| death_place = Mexico City
| nationality = Mexican
| movement = Mexican muralism
| awards =
| patrons =
| imagesize =
| field = painting
| training = Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes
| works = "Atentado a los Maestros Rurales"
| influenced by =
| influenced =
}}
Aurora Reyes Flores (born in Hidalgo del Parral, September 9, 1908 – Mexico City, April 26, 1985){{Cite news|url=http://www.vanguardia.com.mx/articulo/aurora-reyes-fue-la-primera-muralista-mexicana|title=Aurora Reyes fue la primera muralista mexicana|work=Vanguardia|access-date=2017-07-10|language=es}} was a Mexican artist, known as a painter and writer, and she was the first female muralist in Mexico and first exponent of Mexican muralism.{{Cite web|url=https://www.mexicanist.com/l/the-great-women-of-muralism-in-mexico/|title=The Great Women of Muralism in Mexico|date=2020-01-04|website=Mexicanist.com|language=en|access-date=2020-01-11}} She also went by the name Aurora Reyes.
Life
Reyes was the daughter of the soldier León Reyes and his wife Luisa Flores. Her grandfather was general Bernardo Reyes, and her uncle Alfonso Reyes was also a well-known writer and scholar.{{cite book
|editor1-first=Rita
|editor1-last=Arias-Jirasek
|others= Alejandro G. Nieto, Christina Carlos and Veronica Mercado
|title= Women Artists of Modern Mexico: Mujeres artistas en el México de la modernidad/Frida's Contemporaries: Las contemporáneas de Frida
|publisher= Frida National Museum of Mexican Art/museo Mural Diego Rivera
|location=Chicago/Mexico City
|language=en, es
|isbn=978-1-889410-05-0
|year=2008
|page= 156
}}
Shortly after the outbreak of the revolution, due to the political persecution, her family fled to Mexico City. After the situation calmed down, Reyes joined the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria at the age of 13 years, and afterward she visited the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes until 1924. She married the journalist Jorge Godoy, gave birth to her son Héctor in 1926, and shortly after the divorce of her husband in 1931, she bore her second son Jorge.
She had a love interest in Cuban poet Nicolás Guillén. Despite her artistic success and outspoken personality, she died nearly forgotten.
Reyes had relationships with artist that she would parallel with. Reyes had a strong friendship with Frida Kahlo. They were classmates at the Escuela Nacional Prepatoria in the early 1920s, however, Reyes was expelled shortly after enrolling. Her expulsion did not keep them apart, photos captured them together and happy. They remained friends for the rest of their lives. They were important to each other, so much so that Reyes took part as part of the honor guard at Kahlo's funeral. Another friendship that Reyes had was with Concha Michel, this friendship flourished when Kahlo got married in the late 1920s.{{Cite journal|last=Mirkin|first=Dina|date=Fall–Winter 2019|title=Frida Kahlo and Aurora Reyes Painting to the Voice of Concha Michel|journal=Woman's Art Journal}}
Art
She is the first female Mexican-born muralist and a distinguished writer. From 1921 to 1923, she was a student at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes. She had her first solo exhibition at the ARS Gallery in 1925. She exhibited her work at the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana and participated in collective exhibitions in France, Cuba, the United States and Mexico.
In 1927, she began teaching drawing and painting for the Secretariat of Public Education, from which she retired in 1964.
She created seven murals in her lifetime. In 1936, she completed a mural called "Atentado a los maestros rurales" (Attack on Rural Schoolteachers) at the Centro Escolar Revolución. This mural showed how capitalism was at the core of brutality in the Mexican society. In 1937 Reyes painted the Woman of War. In this painting it shows a woman ready to participate in the war due to her deceased child. The child was a victim of war since the mother lost her child she has nothing left and is ready to fight.{{Cite journal|last=Mirkin|first=Dina|date=Spring–Summer 2008|title=To Paint the Unspeakable: Mexican Female Artists' Iconography of the 1930s and Early 1940s|journal=Woman's Art Journal}} Between 1960 and 1972 she painted another four murals in the Auditorium of 15th May of the Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE). In 1978 she finished her sixth mural at the Hernán Cortés house in Coyoacán.Erika Cervantes : [http://www.cimacnoticias.com/noticias/03nov/s03111106.html La revolución pictórica de Aurora Reyes] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925082515/http://www.cimacnoticias.com/noticias/03nov/s03111106.html |date=2008-09-25 }} (Spanish), CimacNoticias, 2003.
Her literary works include Nueve estancias en el desierto, Humanos paisajes, and Espiral en retorno. She received awards for her poetry.
File:Juchitan Market by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1953.jpg|Juchitan Market by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1953
File:Sick Child by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1937.jpg|Sick Child by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1937
File:Portrait of Kroupskaia by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1930.jpg|Portrait of Kroupskaia by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1930
File:Woman of War by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1937.jpg|Woman of War by Aurora Reyes Flores, 1937
Politics
Reyes was outspoken and very political, earning the nickname "Magnolia Iracunda" (Fiery Magnolia) . Her family's time in Mexico City left them very poor which later influenced her politics. She was member of the Partido Comunista Mexicano, a founding member of the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios and of the Confederación Nacional Campesina. Reyes was also a member of the Enseñanza de la República Mexicana in which she defended the rights and participation of women in government and teaching positions. Reyes was also part of other issues. She fought for women's right to vote and their right to hold elected civil posts, an extension on maternity leave and recognition of breastfeeding time for mothers of young children.{{Cite journal|last=Mirkin|first=Dina|date=Autumn 2005 – Winter 2006|title=Aurora Reyes's 'Ataque a la Maestra Rural': The First Mural Created by a Mexican Female Artist|journal=Woman's Art Journal}} She also promoted the creation of daycare centers for the children of schoolteachers.Dina Comisarenco Mirkin: {{jstor|3598094}} Aurora Reyes's "Ataque a la Maestra Rural": The First Mural Created by a Mexican Female Artist], 2005.
In 1960 she participated with other intellectuals in a hunger strike on behalf of political prisoners in Mexico. In 1968, she participated in the student uprising, which forced her into hiding at the La Castañeda psychiatric hospital for a time.
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{commons category|Homage to Aurora Reyes}}
- [http://www.escaner.cl/escaner86/mutaciones.html Aurora Reyes] (Spanish)Tuvo dos hijos, Héctor, a quien reconoció el periodista Jorge de Godoy cuando se casó con Aurora, y Jorge, quien nace fruto de esa unión.
- [https://culturacolectiva.com/arte/aurora-reyes-la-primera-muralista-mexicana/ Aurora Reyes Flores chronicle at El Barrio Antiguo]
- [https://culturacolectiva.com/arte/aurora-reyes-la-primera-muralista-mexicana/ Aurora Reyes Flores Murals]
- [http://www.revistas.unam.mx/index.php/cronicas/article/viewFile/17282/16466 Aurora Reyes Flores Article] at Revistas Unam
- [https://www.proceso.com.mx/192905/revaloracion-de-la-muralista-aurora-reyes Proceso Article about Aurora Reyes Flores] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180815045501/https://www.proceso.com.mx/192905/revaloracion-de-la-muralista-aurora-reyes |date=2018-08-15 }}
- [http://www.mochisonline.com/2018/280118_museo_aurora_reyes.php Aurora Reyes Flores Exhibit at El Museo Regional del Valle del Fuerte]
{{Alumni of the National School of Arts (UNAM)}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Reyes Flores, Aurora}}
Category:20th-century Mexican painters
Category:People from Parral, Chihuahua
Category:Mexican women muralists
Category:20th-century Mexican women painters
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