In this classic survey, now updated with full-color images throughout,
Edward Lucie-Smith introduces the art of Latin America from 1900 to the
present day.
Lucie-Smith examines major artists such as Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo,
as well as dozens of less familiar Latin American artists and exiled
artists from Europe and the United States who spent their lives in South
America, such as Leonora Carrington. The author explains the political
context for artistic development and sets the works in national,
cultural, and international frameworks. Featured in this book are the
artists who have searched for indigenous roots and local tradition;
explored abstraction, expressionism, and new media; entered into
dialogue with European and North American movements, while insisting on
reaching a wide, popular audience for their work; and created an
energetic, innovative, and varied art scene across the South American
continent.
With a new chapter that extends the discussion into the twenty-first
century, a constant theme of Latin American Art Since 1960 is the
embrace of the experimental and the new by artists across Latin America.