New Perspectives Talk: Leopoldo Méndez
Leopoldo Méndez, Printmaking as Form, and the Collective Processes of the Taller de Gráfica Popular
The Kemper Art Museum’s permanent collection holds four works by the Mexican artist Leopoldo Méndez, all prints made from wood engravings and dating from the 1940s. While the formal qualities of these prints are striking on their own terms, this talk by Lauris McQuoid-Greason approaches these works with a focus on the relationship between printmaking as form and the collective processes of art-making employed by Méndez, especially in his founding of the Taller de Gráfica Popular. The “People’s Print Shop,” founded in 1937 in Mexico City and most active during the two decades that followed, produced a large quantity of work with a collective, democratic, and sometimes anonymous approach to art-making that centered popular leftist struggles in both its content and process. The talk will also consider the transnational circulations and connections of the Taller and the broader transnational flows of printmaking as a popular form of artistic production employed in many emancipatory social movements throughout history.
Following the talk, attendees are invited to participate in a 90-minute hands-on printmaking workshop that will explore linocut techniques. Learn more and register.