Urbe: super-poema bolchevique en 5 cantos (Urbe: Bolshevik Super-poem in 5 Parts)

Author Manuel Maples Arce Mexican
Jean Charlot French
Publisher Andrés Botas e Hijo Mexican

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 691

Manuel Maples Arce was the leader of Estridentismo (Stridentism), one of Mexico’s first avant-garde movements of writers and artists, and Charlot was closely associated with it. In Urbe, Maples Arce’s most celebrated book of poetry, he married Stridentism and socialist politics. Charlot’s illustrations interpret the verse through solid and austere designs and recognizable icons of modernity (ocean liner, train, skyscraper). The Stridentists employed woodcut as a vanguard means of expression to promote aspects of postrevolutionary life.





Manuel Maples Arce fue el líder del estridentismo, uno de los primeros movimientos de vanguardia de escritores y artistas de México, con el que Jean Charlot tuvo un estrecho vínculo. Urbe fue el libro de poesía más célebre de Maples Arce, que combinó en esta obra el estridentismo y la política socialista. Las ilustraciones de Charlot, con un diseño sólido y austero, interpretan los poemas por medio de iconos reconocibles de la modernidad (un trasatlántico, un tren, un rascacielos). Los estridentistas emplearon la xilografía como medio de expresión de vanguardia para promocionar aspectos de la vida posrevolucionaria.

Urbe: super-poema bolchevique en 5 cantos (Urbe: Bolshevik Super-poem in 5 Parts), Manuel Maples Arce (Mexican, Papantla 1898–1980 Mexico City), Woodcut illustrations

Due to rights restrictions, this image cannot be enlarged, viewed at full screen, or downloaded.

Open Access

As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.

API

Public domain data for this object can also be accessed using the Met's Open Access API.