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- José Guadalupe Posada - Wikipedia
In 1871, before he was out of his teens, his career began with a job as the political cartoonist for a local newspaper in Aguascalientes, El Jicote ("The Bumblebee"), where his first cartoons were published [4]
- Jose Guadalupe Posada - 59 artworks - illustration - WikiArt. org
Some of his first political cartoons were published in El Jicote, a newspaper that opposed Jesús Gómez Portugal He began his career as an artist making drawings, copying religious images and assisting in a ceramic workshop in the Ucrain
- Mexican artist José Guadalupe Posada
By 1871, the first lithographic political cartoons created by Posada appeared in a publication owned by Pedroza called El Jicote (The Wasp) At that time Posada was only nineteen Eleven illustrations by Posada are known from El Jicote
- The Calaveras of José Guadalupe Posada - The Public Domain Review
Deriving from the Spanish word for 'skulls', these calaveras were illustrations featuring skeletons which would, after Posada's death, become closely associated with the mexican holiday Día de los Muertos, the Day of the Dead
- About the Artist - Clark Art Institute
In 1870 he joined the print studio of José Trinidad Pedroza, where he practiced lithography and engraving, and where his first political cartoons appeared in a publication called El Jicote (The Wasp)
- JOSÉ GUADALUPE POSADA - Arts of the Americas
In 1870 he became an assistant at José Trinidad Pedroza’s studio, where he learned drawing and graphic techniques A year later, he began working as an illustrator at the newspaper El Jicote, where he created several political cartoons for the first time
- José Guadalupe Posada | Smithsonian American Art Museum
During the civil rights era, Chicano artists admired the work of José Guadalupe Posada, whose cartoons and broadsides expressed political discontent before and during the Mexican Revolution Cortéz considered Posada his artistic godfather and depicted him on several occasions
- José Guadalupe Posada, Lampooner - JSTOR
He taught Jose Guadalupe to read and write, until the latter and his younger brother Ciriaco were sent to a municipal school in the San Marcos neighborhood Apparently, Posada enjoyed drawing even as a child, for he made humorous portraits of Josd Cirilo and his young pupils
- José Guadalupe Posada - biographycentral. com
Posada’s illustrations, often satirical and imbued with symbolic undertones, provided a mirror to the social, political, and cultural currents of late 19th and early 20th-century Mexico, a period characterized by upheaval, modernization, and the struggle for national identity
- José Guadalupe Posada | Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Published throughout Mexico during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Posada’s woodcuts and wood engravings appeared in inexpensive literature, most notably politically charged broadsides dealing with pressing political issues of the day
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