Abstract
This paper examines the purported misogyny of José Clemente Orozco's
representations of women by situating one of his more egregious images —the
grinning prostitute in his 1934 mural Catharsis— within the aesthetic and
political discursive context of international modernism, industrial
modernity, and urban development. By locating the production of this mural
within a particular moment in postrevolutionary Mexico and attending to the
political significance of its venue, the essay suggests that Orozco's
image might best be understood as a critique of academic allegory in
general, and more specifically, a critique of the renewal of Porfirian
civic rhetoric with the completion of the Palace of Fine Arts. By
interrogating Orozco's gendered iconography in this way, I argue we
are better able to understand how female allegory, public art, and the
nation-state were being articulated in postrevolutionary Mexico, thereby
enabling an appreciation of both the insights and limits of Orozco's
gendered iconography.
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