I may have been disappointed by the renovation of the upper floor of the Anthropology Museum, but there was no disappointment when Alejandro and I visited Mexico City's newest museum, the Museum of Muralism, last Saturday.
The museum is housed in the former headquarters of the Department of Public Education (known as SEP or "Secretaría de Educación Pública).
The headquarters were located in the Historic Center just a couple blocks north of the Zócalo. In an effort to move government offices out Mexico City, several departments have been moved to other cities. The SEP has been moved to Puebla, and the enormous building has been repurposed to serve as a museum dedicated to the muralist movement.
Muralism is considered to be Mexico's most important contribution to 20th century art. The muralist movement began in the 1920s after the Mexican Revolution. The government sought out artists to do paintings on the walls of government buildings, schools and public spaces to establish a national identity, portray the nation's history, and to glorify the revolution. It could often be viewed as government propaganda, similar to Soviet realism art in the U.S.S.R. However, out of the movement emerged some of the most important painters of modern art.
The former SEP building is an appropriate place for a museum on muralism since the building is filled with mural paintings by numerous artists, particularly Diego Rivera. The walls of the three floors of the two courtyards are covered with Rivera murals... more than in the courtyard of the National Palace, perhaps his best known project.
I visited the building when it was still the SEP headquarters a couple of times to see the paintings, and I wrote about them on the blog. Here are a few of the Rivera murals from just the ground floor. These portray daily life and traditional festivals. (His more political paintings are on the upper floors.)
Before dealing with muralism, the first hall of the museum presents the history of the building. The structure is actually three buildings... 1) the former Church and Convent of Santa María de la Encarnación del Divino Verbo, dating from the 17th and 18th centuries, 2) the 18th century Customs House, where taxes were placed on goods entering the city, and 3) the 20th century renovation of the convent cloisters in neo-classical style done when the site was converted into the SEP headquarters.
Mexico City was built atop the ruins of the Aztec capital, and beneath the building numerous pre-Hispanic artifacts have been found.
There are also objects from the former convent, including a crown worn by novices when they took their vows.
The next hall deals with muralism in Mexico's prehistoric and pre-Hispanic past. The oldest murals in the Americas, dating from 5500 B.C., are from a cave in Baja California. Here is a replica of one of the paintings.
There are also reproductions of mural paintings from the pre-Hispanic civilizations.