Alfredo Zalce
Alfredo Zalce Paintings, Mixed Media and Weavings
Alfredo Zalce (1908–2003) was a renowned Mexican painter, muralist, sculptor, and engraver whose work defined the social realist tradition of the post-revolutionary era. A co-founder of the influential Taller de Gráfica Popular, he championed indigenous and working-class causes through art, creating major murals in Michoacán and Mexico City.
Alfredo Zalce Torres (12 January 1908 – 19 January 2003) was a Mexican artist and contemporary of Diego Rivera, David Siqueiros and other better-known muralists. He worked principally as a painter, sculptor, and engraver, also taught, and was involved in the foundation of a number of institutions of culture and education. He is perhaps best known for his mural painting, typically imbued with "fervent social criticism".[1] He is acclaimed as the first artist to borrow the traditional material of coloured cement as the medium for a "modern work of art".[2] Publicity-shy, he is said to have turned down Mexico's Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes before finally accepting it in 2001.[3] Before his death, Sotheby's described him as "the most important living Mexican artist up to date"

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