Abstract
The notions of the classical and the universal, nowadays an element
implicit in any criti- cism concerned with Rufino Tamayo, were, during the
1920s and 1930s, a basic prin- ciple of the esthetic project of Tamayo and
the Contemporáneos. This article details the moments, the circumstances and
the esthetic affinities which, in a plural and polemical cultural period,
were held in common by this artist and the group. This study suggests that
the formulation and exposition of the discourse of the classical and the
universal provided the argument upon which the painter and the literary
group grounded their esthetic project; it is, furthermore, the key to the
aspirations and pursuits of that generation and is what explains the
cultural hegemony of its creations and their continuing importance.
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