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| 1886 December 8 |
Jose Diego Rivera and his twin brother, Jose Carlos Rivera,
are born in Guanajuato, Mexico, eldest sons of Diego Rivera
and Maria del Pilar Barrientos. |
| 1888 June |
Jose Carlos Rivera, Diego's twin dies. |
| 1891 |
Maria del Pilar, Diego's sister, is born in Guanajuato. |
| 1892 |
Diego's mother takes Diego and his sister, Maria, and moves to
Mexico City. Diego Rivera Senior soon joins the family there. |
| 1896-1898 |
Attends night classes at the San Carlos Academy of Fine Arts. |
| 1898-1905 |
Attends full time day classes and graduates from San Carlos Academy.
La Era 1904 |
| 1906 |
Rivera exhibits for the first time, showing twenty-six works at the
annual Exhibition of the San Carlos Academy.
Diego, with his father's political connections, travels to Veracruz to
visit Governor Dehesa, who grants him a scholarship which
finances his travels and studies in Europe. |
| 1907 January 7 |
Arrives in Santander, Spain aboard the ship, Alfonso XIII, then
travels by train to Madrid.
Self-Portrait 1907
Night in Avila 1907
The House of Vizcaya 1907 |
| 1907 - 1908 |
Travels throughout Spain, studies Old Masters: Goya, Velaquez,
Brueghel, El Greco; paints canvases which are sent home to his
Mexican patrons and sells his other works to Spanish art galleries. |
| 1909 |
Travels to Paris and beyond, touring throughout Belgium, studying
Flemish Masters; then on to London. In Bruges, Belgium, he meets a
Russian émigré artist, Angeline Beloff, who goes back to Paris with
him and becomes his companion for the next ten years. |
| 1910 |
Exhibits six of his paintings at the Society of Independent Artists in
Paris. Takes one of his paintings, House on the Bridge, off the wall
and exhibits it in the Salon de la Societe des Artistes Francais, a
juried show.
Head of a Breton Woman 1910 |
| 1910 September |
Sails home to Mexico to participate in President Porfirio Diaz's
political Mexican Art Exhibition. |
| 1910 October 2 |
Diego arrives in Veracruz, Mexico, with armloads of canvases,
greeted by his father and sister. |
| 1910 November 20 |
Exhibits thirty-five oils, two etchings and eight drawings in
the San Carlos Academy Exhibit, a show mounted by Mexican
artists, not Spanish, for the Porfirian centennial celebration.
Witnesses the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution, that will
last from 1910 to 1920. |
| 1911 |
Diego returns to Paris. In April, Angeline Beloff returns
from Russia to meet him there. Angeline becomes his common-law
wife and they move together to 52 avenue du Maine, Montparnasse.
Enters two large canvases of Iztaccihuatl in the Salon d'Automne
In the summer they travel to Normandy and in the winter
they visit Barcelona. There he paints large canvases of the
surrounding Catalonian mountains in his first modernistic style. |
| 1912 |
Meets Piet Mondrian who lives in the same building and who
is beginning to paint his trees in the Cubist style. Rivera paints
a watercolor, Trees, revealing the first Cubist influence in his work.
In the spring, he and Angeline travel to Toledo, Spain, with the
specific purpose to study El Greco. They live at 7 Calle del Angel
that they use many times on their trips back and forth from Paris.
He paints large canvases such as The Old Ones and View of Toledo.
Exhibits two of his Catalonian paintings in the 1912 spring Salon.
Moves with Angeline to 26 rue du Depart, Montparnasse, where
they live for the next six years. Most other artists had also moved
from Montmartre by this time, preferring to live on the more open
avenues of Montparnasse.
View of Toledo 1912
View of Arcueil |
| 1913 |
Completely immersed in Cubism by the beginning of this year
and paints in this genre for the next four and a half years.
Meets and becomes a good friend of Modigliani, who paints
three Rivera portraits.
In February, Mexican President-Elect Madero, is murdered,
suddenly ending Rivera's government subsidy.
Landscape at Toledo 1913
Still Life 1913
Woman at a Well 1913
Portrait of Oscar Miestchaninoff
The Adoration of the Virgin 1913 |
| 1914 |
Picasso sends for Rivera to come to lunch at his home. Diego
is not only captivated by Pablo but is even more intrigued by
his large collection of Rousseau paintings. Picasso and Rivera
become great friends and Cubist painting compatriots over the
next four years.
First one-man exhibit at the Berthe Weill Gallery in April.
In the summer, he and Angeline, with artist friends, embark on a
walking tour of Spain. In Mallorca he is caught up in the outbreak of
the First World War. He and Angeline sail to Barcelona, then take the
train to Madrid, where they remain for almost a year.
La Tour Eiffel 1914
Portrait of Two Women 1914
Sailor at Breakfast (Marinero Almorzando) 1914
Farmhouse 1914 |
| 1915 |
In the summer, Diego returns to Paris alone, leaving Angeline in
Madrid for two months.
He makes a contract with an art dealer, Leonce Rosenberg, to provide
a quantity of paintings per month, to be paid according to subject and
size. He now has the money to send for Angeline to travel back to Paris.
While Angeline is away, he again meets Russian artist,
Marevna Vorobyov-Stebelska, and she becomes his mistress.
All Salons are closed due to the war so there are no exhibits in Paris.
Spanish Still Life 1915
The Architect, Jesus T. Acevedo 1915
Martin Luis Guzman 1915 |
| 1916 |
Angeline becomes pregnant and they have a baby boy, Diego Junior,
born in August.
Exhibits at the Modern Gallery, New York City.
The Telegraph Pole 1916
Motherhood Angeline and the Child Diego 1916 |
| 1917 |
Exhibits and sells his paintings through Rosenberg's gallery, the
Galerie L'Effort Moderne, Paris.
He has a serious disagreement with Picasso and abandons Cubism
forever and returns to naturalistic imagery.
In the winter, his son, Diego Junior, dies. |
| 1918 |
Moves with Angeline to the Champ-de-Mars. He is painting now
under the influence of Rousseau and Cezanne.
The Outskirts of Paris 1918
Still Life 1918 |
| 1919 |
Daughter, Marika, born in Paris to Marevna Vorobyov-Stebelska.
The new Mexican president, Alvaro Obregon, summons artists
home to paint nationalistic murals.
Meets with David Alfaro Siqueiros and discusses his plans to
drastically change the traditional French and Spanish art of Mexico. |
| 1920 |
Detours to Italy to study the artistic techniques of fresco paintings.
Returns briefly to Paris to make plans to return to Mexico. |
| 1921 |
In June arrives back home in Mexico.
In December, begins his mural, Creation, in the Simon Bolivar
Amphitheatre of the National Preparatory School.
Near the end of the year, his father, Diego Rivera Senior, dies. |
| 1922 |
Co-founds the Union of Revolutionary Painters, Sculptors, and
Graphic Artists.
Becomes an official member of the Mexican Communist Party.
Meets and marries his first wife, Guadalupe Marin, in Catholic church. |
| 1923 March 23 |
Begins his greatest Mexican mural, consisting of 128 individual
panels, in the Ministry of Education building. This mural becomes
one of the most lasting triumphs of 20th Century art.
Bather of Tehuantepec 1923 |
| 1924 |
Daughter, Guadalupe, is born.
La Molendera 1924 |
| 1925 |
While still working on the Ministry of Education Cycle, begins
painting a major cycle of frescos at the National School of Agriculture
at Chapingo. |
| 1926 |
Daughter, Ruth, is born.
The Tortilla Maker 1926
La Siesta 1926 |
| 1927 |
In the fall, invited to the Soviet Union to participate in the celebration
of the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian October Revolution. In
September, visits museums in Berlin then takes the train to Moscow.
Lupe gets a divorce and Rivera stays in Soviet Union for eight months. |
| 1928 |
Returns to Mexico in June.
Finishes the mural on the top floor of the Ministry of Education building.
Finishes frescos at Chapingo.
Meets Mexican artist, Frida Kahlo.
Dance in Tehuantepec 1928 |
| 1928 July 17 |
Mexican President-Elect Obregon is assassinated. |
| 1929 August 29 |
Diego and Frida married in legal secular wedding ceremony. |
| 1929 |
Paints mural in the stairwell at the National Palace and one at the
Ministry of Health.
Commissioned by the U.S. ambassador in Mexico to paint a mural
at the Palace of Cortes in Cuenavaca.
Appointed Director of the upper school of the San Carlos Academy
of Art, from which he had graduated, but is soon dismissed after
attempting to make major changes in the art curriculum.
Expelled from the Communist Party. |
| 1930 |
Commissioned to paint a mural in the stairwell of the San Francisco
Stock Exchange Luncheon Club and another at the California
School of Fine Arts.
My Godfathers Sons Portrait of Modesto and Jesus 1930
Zapata 1930 |
| 1931 |
Produces the new Museum of Modern Art's second one-man show in
New York City, the first was by Matisse. His retrospective sets
a new attendance record for the museum.
The Flowered Canoe 1931
The Feast of Santa Anita 1931 |
| 1932 |
At the request of Edsel Ford, begins to paint multiple panels depicting
the 20th Century automobile industry at the Detroit Institute of Arts.
Designs sets and costumes for the Carlos Chavez's ballet, Horse Power.
The Fruits of Labor 1932
Boy and Dog 1932 |
| 1933 November 13 |
Arrives in New York City with Frida. Begins to paint a mural at the
new Rockefeller Center. In April, he is suspended from the project
and several months later, the entire mural is destroyed.
Photograph of mural, Man, Controller of the Universe, in working progress, at Rockefeller
Center before it was destroyed |
| 1933 |
Diego and Frida return to Mexico to a new home and studio that
he has built for them in the San Angel suburb of Mexico City. |
| 1934 |
Executes the mural originally planned for Rockefeller Center in a
smaller scale at the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City. |
| 1935 |
Completes the murals in the stairwell of the National Palace.
Indian Woman 1935 |
| 1936 |
Paints four frescos in Hotel Reforma Giro Bar, Mexico City, with
strong anti-government imagery. They are later removed from the walls.
The Pinole Seller 1936 |
| 1937 January 9 |
The Russian exile, Leon Trotsky and his wife, Natalia Sedova, arrive
in Mexico, politically arranged by Rivera with Mexican
President Cardenas. Rivera provides a home for them at Frida's family
Blue House in the Coyoacan suburb of Mexico City which he
fortifies for their safety. |
| 1938 |
Andre Breton, the French surrealistic poet, and his wife stay as
houseguests with Diego and Frida. Breton writes a manifesto about
art and revolution with Trotsky. |
| 1939 |
Rivera and Trotsky separate after arguments about Marxist ideology.
Diego and Frida agree on a marriage separation.
Portrait of Madesta and Inesita 1939 |
| 1940 |
Paints ten murals in front of a live audience attending the festivities
at the Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island,
San Francisco.
He invites Frida to join him in the United States. |
| 1940 December 8 |
Diego and Frida remarry on his 54th birthday. |
| 1941-42 |
Returns to Mexico, paints large quantity of easel art, rendering
portraits of both the rich and the poor.
Paints frescos in the courtyard of the National Palace.
Plans interior construction of his Anahuacalli Museum in the
Blue House to exhibit his vast collection of Pre-Columbian sculpture.
Cargo Man 1941
Pair of Indians |
| 1943 |
Paints two murals for the National Institute of Cardiology.
Becomes one of the first members of the National College.
Holds conferences on art, science and politics.
Appointed a professor at La Esmeralda College of Art.
Portrait of Natasha Gellman 1943 |
| 1946 |
Commissioned to paint large sized mural at the new Hotel del Prado.
Paints his last masterpiece, Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park,
in the restaurant of the hotel. |
| 1947 |
Forms the National Institute of Fine Arts' Commission for
Mural Painting in partnership with Jose Clemente Orozco and
David Alfaro Siqueiros. |
| 1949 |
Fiftieth Anniversary of his artistic career celebrated by a
retrospective exhibition at the Palace of Fine Arts.
Portrait of Benito Juarez 1948 |
| 1950 |
Awarded the National Prize for Plastic Arts at the Venice Biennale.
Designs sets for Jose Revueltas' stage play El cuadrante de la soledad. |
| 1951 |
Paints underwater murals in polystyrene in the "Carcamo
del Rio Lerma" waterworks in Chapultepec Park in Mexico City and
executes the stone mosaic in the well at the entrance. |
| 1952 |
Paints a movable mural for the exhibition Twenty Centuries
of Mexican Art which travels around Europe. The inclusion of his
portraits of Stalin and Mao Tse-tung results in the removal of the mural
from the exhibition. It is sent to the People's Republic of China. |
| 1953 |
Produces a glass mosaic mural on the facade of the Teatro de los Insurgentes.
Finishes his work on the front of the Olympic Stadium at Mexico
University.
Paints a mural in La Raza Hospital for the Institute of Social Security.
Portrait of Sra Dona Elena Flores de Carrillo 1953 |
| 1954 |
Participates in a solidarity rally for the president of Guatemala,
Jacoba Arbenz.
In September, he is officially accepted back into the Communist Party. |
| 1954 July 13 |
Frida Kahlo, Diego's wife, dies. |
| 1955 |
Marries his art dealer, Emma Hurtado, in July.
In July, Diego is diagnosed with cancer.
Entrusts the Blue House which houses his Anahuacalli Museum
of Pre-Columbian sculpture to the Mexican people.
Travels to the Soviet Union to seek medical attention.
Moscow May Day Parade 1955 |
| 1957 November 24 |
Diego Rivera, painting in his studio, dies in San Angel, Mexico.
Evening at Acapulco 1956 Self-Portrait 1949 |