fbpx
Wikipedia

Gustavo Arias Murueta

Gustavo Arias Murueta (May 26, 1923 – April 15, 2019) was a Mexican painter, sculptor and poet, a member of the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana best known for his work in drawing, graphic arts and oil painting. He originally studied architecture at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México where he met artists such as Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco. In the 1950s, he began to produce artworks, with his first exhibition in 1961. From then until his death he had a career as an artist with individual and collective exhibitions in both Mexico and abroad. While his work had been heavily influenced by Orozco, he was considered part of the Generación de la Ruptura movement.

Gustavo Arias Murueta
Born
Gustavo Arias Murueta

(1923-05-26)May 26, 1923
DiedApril 15, 2019(2019-04-15) (aged 95)
NationalityMexican
Known forGraphic Art
ChildrenLourdes, Gustavo, Hugo and Livia
AwardsHonorific Award in Painting by Salón de la Plástica Mexicana and First Place in Drawing, 1975.
Websitewww.gustavoariasmurueta.com

Life edit

Gustavo Arias Murueta was born in Los Angeles, California and was of Spanish descent. His parents were Esteban Arias Renovato and Elisa Murueta Andrade.[1][2] In 1934, he entered primary school in Torreón, Coahuila, but changed schools when the family moved to Mexico City in 1939. He entered the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in 1946 to study architecture where he met a number of important painters such as Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco.[1][2][3] He married Lourdes Chávez Correa in 1949. The couple had four children: Lila (1953), Gustavo (1954), Hugo (1956) and Livia (1965).[4]

He was an artist, writer, sculptor and poet.[1] He began creating isolated drawings and studies and experimental theater around 1956, with his first exhibitions in the early 1960s.[1][4] He lived in Europe and the United States and traveled in Asia as well as some other countries, mostly to visit museums and study the works of great masters.[2] However, from 1974 until his death in 2019, he was based in Mexico City.[3] He died on April 15, 2019, aged 95.[5]

Among his teachers was Japanese artist Yukio Fukasawa, through a seminar on printmaking in Mexico City.[6]

Career edit

 
Renacimiento.

Most of his career had been focused on drawing, graphic arts and oil painting although he was a poet and sculptor.[2] In 1944, he began working in a print shop which would have an impact on his artistic career. He began his career as a professional artist in the early 1960s, established his own studio in 1974 and traveling to Europe in 1976 to study the works of masterpieces in museums there.[2][4]

Arias Murueta had exhibitions of his art beginning in 1961, with individual venues such as Galería Chaputepec (1962), San Diego Fort in Acapulco (1963), Institutio Mexicano Norteamericano de Relaciones Culturales, Mexico City (1963)(1967), Pacific Art Gallery, Los Angeles (1965), Galería La Selva, Cuernavaca (1966), Instituto Cultural Mexicano Israeli, Mexico City (1966)(1971), Salón de la Plástica Mexicana, Mexico City (1968), Zegry Gallery, New York (1970), Galería La Bola, Mexico City (1970), Galería Castano Ware, Mexico City (1972), Palacio de Bellas Artes (1973), Sol de Río Gallery, San Antonio (1974), Galería Ponce, Mexico City (1976), Galería Summa Artis, Mexico City (1978), Club de Golf Bellavista, Mexico City (1978)(1979)(1982), Galería Kin (1980)(1982), Universidad de Guanajuato (1980), Alianza Francesas de Polanco, Mexico City (1980), Galerías Liverpool, Mexico City (1981), Gerhard Wurzer Gallery, Houston (1981)(1982)(1985)(1989), Feria de Huamantla, Tlaxcala (1981), Paris Art Center (1983), Galeria Misrachi, Mexico City (1983)(1989)(1992), Museo de la Ciudad de México (1985), Carolyn Hill Gallery, New York (1985)(1987), Cuajimalpa Cultural Center, Mexico City (1985) .[1][4] His latest exhibitions include a retrospective of his work at the Club Piso 51 at the Torre Mayor in Mexico City in November 2010,[3][7] and an exhibition called Cosmogonía at the German Club of Mexico City in 2011.[8]

He participated in numerous collective exhibitions starting in 1961 including those in the Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, University of Concepción, Chile, the Mexican embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel, Museo de Arte Moderno, the cultural program of the Mexico City Olympic Games Casa de las Américas in Havana, Texas Institute Educational Development in San Antonio, Museo Carrillo Gil, Mexico City, Palacio de Bellas Artes and the Centro Experimental de Arte Gráfico in Madrid.[4] In March 2012, he participated in a historical collective exhibition called "Shape possibilities, visual Anthology among centuries" (Las posibilidades de la forma, Antología visual de entresiglos) with Mexican Masters Gilberto Aceves Navarro, José Luis Cuevas, Sebastián, Manuel Felguérez, Roger von Gunten, Luis López Loza, Vicente Rojo Almazán and Francisco Toledo .[9]

His work can be found in museums, libraries and galleries in both Mexico and abroad.[1] These include the Museo de Arte Moderno, the Casa de las Americas in Havana, the Engraving Museum of Plovdiv, Bulgaria, the Italo Latinamericano Instituto in Rome, Televisa, the Museum of Mexican Engraving in Prague, the Centro de Estudios de Arte Contemporáneo in Madrid, the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Banco Nacional de México, the Zegry Gallery in New York, Paris Art Center, Galería Lagard in Buenos Aires, Huber Art Center in Pennsylvania, Museo de la Estampa in Mexico City, Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum in Chicago, Mexico City International Airport, The Museum of Graphic Techniques in Rome, Editorial Diana in Mexico City, Museum of Modern Art in Cuenca, Ecuador, MUNAL, Museo Carrillo Gil and the Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City.[4][8]

He was told by Helen Escobedo, then director of the Museo de Arte Moderno, that he needed to create new venues for art because the authorities would not recognize his work.[8] This eventually led to the opening of the Centro Experimental de Arte Gráfico in 1968 and his own gallery.[4]

In addition to exhibitions, he participated in a number of other projects. From 1968 to 1970, he worked with other artist to create a mural commemorating the student uprising of 1968.[7][8] Later, in 1982, he created the mural “Proyecto escultórico.” He appeared on Mexican television in 1971 in a show integrating music, poetry and visual arts. In 1973 he published “La carcel para un a flor,” an erotic poem accompanied by his drawings. In 1975 he created the illustration for the front cover of a book called “El cuento erótico en México.” In 1980, he was a guest lecturer at the Universidad de Guanajuato.[4]

He received two recognitions for his work from the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana, of which he is a member. One was an honorable mention in painting and the other was first place in a drawing competition, both in 1975.[1][4]

Artistry edit

 
Cosmogonía.

Arias Murueta’s main media are drawing, graphic art and oil painting.(the artist) One major theme of his works is the concept of birth and the right time to emerge. Another important theme is the struggle between chaos and order, being and non-being, existence and non-existence, with his works looking to achieve a kind of balance between the opposites.[1] Although he studied architecture instead of art at college, at that time he met José Clemente Orozco, who became a major influence on his work.[2] However, he part of the Generación de la Ruptura, which broke from the Mexican School of Painting of which Orozco was a member.[9]

In his early youth Arias Murueta Murueta dressed and manipulated marionettes.[10] These figures appear several times in his first drawings between 1960 and 1963 . The abstract artwork of Arias Murueta can be understood in Picasso's statement: "In the old days the paintings followed a stepwise process ended. A painting almost always is the sum of elements. I make a painting, then I destroyed it. But at the end, nothing is lost: the red I took away from a place finishes elsewhere". Although generally conducts large-scale works on canvas, Arias Murueta also uses polypropylene because it retains more of the oil painting.

The artwork of Master Arias Murueta received various reviews, including those of the poet, publisher, editor and proofreader Ali Chumacero and curator Toby Eric Joysmith.[11]

In early 1999, the Deputy Director of Programming of the University Museum of Arts and Sciences (MUCA) Jorge Reynoso, in his own words, twined the work of Arias Murueta with his contemporaries Miguel Aldana, Manuel Felguérez and Vicente Rojo Almazán.[12]

Collective Mural, 1968 student uprising edit

Arias Murueta collaborated with other artists in the realization of a collective mural to support student demands during the student uprising at Mexico in 1968. The mural was a work performed on corrugated zinc sheets covering the ruins of the monument to Miguel Alemán Valdés. The execution was carried out over several Sundays when the National Strike Committee in the forecourt of the popular festivals organized by the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). In addition to Arias Murueta, other artists participated like Guillermo Meza, Lilia Carrillo, Benito Messeguer, José Luis Cuevas, Fanny Rabel, Manuel Felguérez, Pedro Preux, Ricardo Rocha, Carlos Olachea, José Muñoz Medina, Francisco Icaza, Adolfo Pérez Mexiac and Manuel Coronado, among others. [citation needed]

The mural itself was created without unity among the different representations of artists, highlighting the colors and strong lines, similar to a collage of images that not all were related to the social events at the time. Arias Murueta chose to honor a young woman killed in the crackdown on the Zocalo (Plaza de la Constitución, Mexico City) on August 28 of that year. Her death, by rupturing of the bowel, was represented by Arias Murueta with a hanging doll, from whose womb torn out colored laces.[13][14][15][16][17][18]

Bibliography edit

+ Toby Erik Joysmith: The Arts. Artin Abstract. The News, México City, octubre 24 de 1976. The Arts, Metamorphosis and Mystery, The News, México City, 25 de junio de 1978. The Gambits of Ambiguity, The News, México City, 16 de mayo de 1982. Arias Murueta, Algo aún más allá, EDAMEX, 1983.

+ Raquel Tibol: La Cultura de México, Cristales y Células, Revista Política, abril de 1966. Diorama de la Cultura. El Salón, Excelsior, septiembre de 1972. Difusuón Cultural de la UNAM, Artes Plásticas, Los Universitarios, enero de 1977.

+ Esther de Vecsey: Arias Murueta, Gerhard Wurzer Gallery, Houston Tx, 1980.

+ Leonard Horowitz: Art Speak, Murueta: That special painter's atmosphere, p 3. Vol VIII, No. 6, 1985.

+ Art News, Gerhard Warzer, p 123, One man exhibition, Galería II, Houston, Tx. 1981.

+ Gustavo Arias Murueta: Marionettes, de Vecsey, Edther, Carolyn Hill Gallery, 1985.[10]

+ Tiempo, números 2083-2095, Tiempo, S.A. de C.V., p 53, 1982[19]

+ El Hombre y la Violencia, Revista de Bellas Artes, números 31-36, 1970.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h . Mexico City: Gustavo Arias Murueta. Archived from the original on January 3, 2017. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f [Summary] (PDF) (in Spanish). Mexico City: Camara Nacional de la Industria del Vestido. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c "Expondrá Gustavo Arias obra retrospectiva en su galería" [Gustavo Arias will exhibit his work in a retrospective at his gallery] (in Spanish). Mexico City: NOTIMEX. November 19, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Curriculum Gustavo Arias Murueta" [Résumé] (in Spanish). Mexico City: Nucleo Arte Galería. March 8, 2012.
  5. ^ "Murió Gustavo Arias Murueta, un artista de ruptura". El Economista. Retrieved 2019-04-18.
  6. ^ Camargo, Angelina (March 17, 1980). "Para que el Artista Sobresalga en Nuestro País, Necesita Gran Vocación y Disciplina". Excelsior. Mexico City.
  7. ^ a b [Retrospective of Arias Murueta as Club 51 of the Torre Mayor] (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Universal. November 28, 2010. Archived from the original on November 12, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d "Arias Murueta, medio siglo de libertad" [Arias Murueta, half centuryof liberty] (in Spanish). Mexico City: Milenio. May 22, 2011. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  9. ^ a b "Se reunirán destacados artistas plásticos de la ruptura en exposición" [Distinguished artists from the Generación de la Ruptura will reunite] (in Spanish). Mexico City: NOTIMEX. March 8, 2012.
  10. ^ a b Gustavo Arias Murueta: Marionettes, de Vecsey, Edther, Carolyn Hill Gallery, 1985
  11. ^ Arias Murueta, Toby Eric Joysmith, EDAMEX, p 17, 18, 1983.ISBN 968-409-234-2
  12. ^ Tiempo Callado, Difusión Cultural UNAM, Secretaría de Comunicación, Jorge Reynoso Pohlenz, 1999
  13. ^ La era de la discrepancia, p35, 38, 46, 55 y 458. Olivier Debroise, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Museo Universitario de Ciencias y Arte. UNAM, 2006. ISBN 968-9056-00-X
  14. ^ Ignacio Asúnsolo. Escultor (1890-1965). Exposición antológica. Museo Nacional de Arte, 1985.
  15. ^ Raquel Tibol: Confrontaciones, crónicas y recuento. Ediciones Sámara, 1992.
  16. ^ Confrontaciones, Raquel Tibol, 1992.
  17. ^ Evocación del mural improvisado y colectivo de 1968, Revista Proceso, Raquel Tibol, 2010 [1] 2010-10-05 at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 2013-10-16. Retrieved 2013-11-14.
  18. ^ Crónica 1968, Daniel Cazés, Plaza y Valdés, 391 páginas, 1993.
  19. ^ Tiempo, números 2083-2095, Tiempo, S.A. de C.V., p 53, 1982 result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CEwQ6AEwBw
  20. ^ El Hombre y la Violencia, Revista de Bellas Artes, números 31-36, 1970 result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCsQ6AEwADgK

Links edit

  • Official Page of Gustavo Arias Murueta[2]
  • Biographical Video of Gustavo Arias Murueta on YouTube

gustavo, arias, murueta, 1923, april, 2019, mexican, painter, sculptor, poet, member, salón, plástica, mexicana, best, known, work, drawing, graphic, arts, painting, originally, studied, architecture, universidad, nacional, autónoma, méxico, where, artists, su. Gustavo Arias Murueta May 26 1923 April 15 2019 was a Mexican painter sculptor and poet a member of the Salon de la Plastica Mexicana best known for his work in drawing graphic arts and oil painting He originally studied architecture at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico where he met artists such as Rufino Tamayo David Alfaro Siqueiros and Jose Clemente Orozco In the 1950s he began to produce artworks with his first exhibition in 1961 From then until his death he had a career as an artist with individual and collective exhibitions in both Mexico and abroad While his work had been heavily influenced by Orozco he was considered part of the Generacion de la Ruptura movement Gustavo Arias MuruetaBornGustavo Arias Murueta 1923 05 26 May 26 1923MexicoDiedApril 15 2019 2019 04 15 aged 95 Mexico City MexicoNationalityMexicanKnown forGraphic ArtChildrenLourdes Gustavo Hugo and LiviaAwardsHonorific Award in Painting by Salon de la Plastica Mexicana and First Place in Drawing 1975 Websitewww gustavoariasmurueta com Contents 1 Life 2 Career 3 Artistry 4 Collective Mural 1968 student uprising 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 LinksLife editGustavo Arias Murueta was born in Los Angeles California and was of Spanish descent His parents were Esteban Arias Renovato and Elisa Murueta Andrade 1 2 In 1934 he entered primary school in Torreon Coahuila but changed schools when the family moved to Mexico City in 1939 He entered the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico in 1946 to study architecture where he met a number of important painters such as Rufino Tamayo David Alfaro Siqueiros and Jose Clemente Orozco 1 2 3 He married Lourdes Chavez Correa in 1949 The couple had four children Lila 1953 Gustavo 1954 Hugo 1956 and Livia 1965 4 He was an artist writer sculptor and poet 1 He began creating isolated drawings and studies and experimental theater around 1956 with his first exhibitions in the early 1960s 1 4 He lived in Europe and the United States and traveled in Asia as well as some other countries mostly to visit museums and study the works of great masters 2 However from 1974 until his death in 2019 he was based in Mexico City 3 He died on April 15 2019 aged 95 5 Among his teachers was Japanese artist Yukio Fukasawa through a seminar on printmaking in Mexico City 6 Career edit nbsp Renacimiento Most of his career had been focused on drawing graphic arts and oil painting although he was a poet and sculptor 2 In 1944 he began working in a print shop which would have an impact on his artistic career He began his career as a professional artist in the early 1960s established his own studio in 1974 and traveling to Europe in 1976 to study the works of masterpieces in museums there 2 4 Arias Murueta had exhibitions of his art beginning in 1961 with individual venues such as Galeria Chaputepec 1962 San Diego Fort in Acapulco 1963 Institutio Mexicano Norteamericano de Relaciones Culturales Mexico City 1963 1967 Pacific Art Gallery Los Angeles 1965 Galeria La Selva Cuernavaca 1966 Instituto Cultural Mexicano Israeli Mexico City 1966 1971 Salon de la Plastica Mexicana Mexico City 1968 Zegry Gallery New York 1970 Galeria La Bola Mexico City 1970 Galeria Castano Ware Mexico City 1972 Palacio de Bellas Artes 1973 Sol de Rio Gallery San Antonio 1974 Galeria Ponce Mexico City 1976 Galeria Summa Artis Mexico City 1978 Club de Golf Bellavista Mexico City 1978 1979 1982 Galeria Kin 1980 1982 Universidad de Guanajuato 1980 Alianza Francesas de Polanco Mexico City 1980 Galerias Liverpool Mexico City 1981 Gerhard Wurzer Gallery Houston 1981 1982 1985 1989 Feria de Huamantla Tlaxcala 1981 Paris Art Center 1983 Galeria Misrachi Mexico City 1983 1989 1992 Museo de la Ciudad de Mexico 1985 Carolyn Hill Gallery New York 1985 1987 Cuajimalpa Cultural Center Mexico City 1985 1 4 His latest exhibitions include a retrospective of his work at the Club Piso 51 at the Torre Mayor in Mexico City in November 2010 3 7 and an exhibition called Cosmogonia at the German Club of Mexico City in 2011 8 He participated in numerous collective exhibitions starting in 1961 including those in the Universidad Autonoma de Puebla University of Concepcion Chile the Mexican embassy in Tel Aviv Israel Museo de Arte Moderno the cultural program of the Mexico City Olympic Games Casa de las Americas in Havana Texas Institute Educational Development in San Antonio Museo Carrillo Gil Mexico City Palacio de Bellas Artes and the Centro Experimental de Arte Grafico in Madrid 4 In March 2012 he participated in a historical collective exhibition called Shape possibilities visual Anthology among centuries Las posibilidades de la forma Antologia visual de entresiglos with Mexican Masters Gilberto Aceves Navarro Jose Luis Cuevas Sebastian Manuel Felguerez Roger von Gunten Luis Lopez Loza Vicente Rojo Almazan and Francisco Toledo 9 His work can be found in museums libraries and galleries in both Mexico and abroad 1 These include the Museo de Arte Moderno the Casa de las Americas in Havana the Engraving Museum of Plovdiv Bulgaria the Italo Latinamericano Instituto in Rome Televisa the Museum of Mexican Engraving in Prague the Centro de Estudios de Arte Contemporaneo in Madrid the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Banco Nacional de Mexico the Zegry Gallery in New York Paris Art Center Galeria Lagard in Buenos Aires Huber Art Center in Pennsylvania Museo de la Estampa in Mexico City Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum in Chicago Mexico City International Airport The Museum of Graphic Techniques in Rome Editorial Diana in Mexico City Museum of Modern Art in Cuenca Ecuador MUNAL Museo Carrillo Gil and the Museo Rufino Tamayo Mexico City 4 8 He was told by Helen Escobedo then director of the Museo de Arte Moderno that he needed to create new venues for art because the authorities would not recognize his work 8 This eventually led to the opening of the Centro Experimental de Arte Grafico in 1968 and his own gallery 4 In addition to exhibitions he participated in a number of other projects From 1968 to 1970 he worked with other artist to create a mural commemorating the student uprising of 1968 7 8 Later in 1982 he created the mural Proyecto escultorico He appeared on Mexican television in 1971 in a show integrating music poetry and visual arts In 1973 he published La carcel para un a flor an erotic poem accompanied by his drawings In 1975 he created the illustration for the front cover of a book called El cuento erotico en Mexico In 1980 he was a guest lecturer at the Universidad de Guanajuato 4 He received two recognitions for his work from the Salon de la Plastica Mexicana of which he is a member One was an honorable mention in painting and the other was first place in a drawing competition both in 1975 1 4 Artistry edit nbsp Cosmogonia Arias Murueta s main media are drawing graphic art and oil painting the artist One major theme of his works is the concept of birth and the right time to emerge Another important theme is the struggle between chaos and order being and non being existence and non existence with his works looking to achieve a kind of balance between the opposites 1 Although he studied architecture instead of art at college at that time he met Jose Clemente Orozco who became a major influence on his work 2 However he part of the Generacion de la Ruptura which broke from the Mexican School of Painting of which Orozco was a member 9 In his early youth Arias Murueta Murueta dressed and manipulated marionettes 10 These figures appear several times in his first drawings between 1960 and 1963 The abstract artwork of Arias Murueta can be understood in Picasso s statement In the old days the paintings followed a stepwise process ended A painting almost always is the sum of elements I make a painting then I destroyed it But at the end nothing is lost the red I took away from a place finishes elsewhere Although generally conducts large scale works on canvas Arias Murueta also uses polypropylene because it retains more of the oil painting The artwork of Master Arias Murueta received various reviews including those of the poet publisher editor and proofreader Ali Chumacero and curator Toby Eric Joysmith 11 In early 1999 the Deputy Director of Programming of the University Museum of Arts and Sciences MUCA Jorge Reynoso in his own words twined the work of Arias Murueta with his contemporaries Miguel Aldana Manuel Felguerez and Vicente Rojo Almazan 12 Collective Mural 1968 student uprising editArias Murueta collaborated with other artists in the realization of a collective mural to support student demands during the student uprising at Mexico in 1968 The mural was a work performed on corrugated zinc sheets covering the ruins of the monument to Miguel Aleman Valdes The execution was carried out over several Sundays when the National Strike Committee in the forecourt of the popular festivals organized by the National Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM In addition to Arias Murueta other artists participated like Guillermo Meza Lilia Carrillo Benito Messeguer Jose Luis Cuevas Fanny Rabel Manuel Felguerez Pedro Preux Ricardo Rocha Carlos Olachea Jose Munoz Medina Francisco Icaza Adolfo Perez Mexiac and Manuel Coronado among others citation needed The mural itself was created without unity among the different representations of artists highlighting the colors and strong lines similar to a collage of images that not all were related to the social events at the time Arias Murueta chose to honor a young woman killed in the crackdown on the Zocalo Plaza de la Constitucion Mexico City on August 28 of that year Her death by rupturing of the bowel was represented by Arias Murueta with a hanging doll from whose womb torn out colored laces 13 14 15 16 17 18 Bibliography edit Toby Erik Joysmith The Arts Artin Abstract The News Mexico City octubre 24 de 1976 The Arts Metamorphosis and Mystery The News Mexico City 25 de junio de 1978 The Gambits of Ambiguity The News Mexico City 16 de mayo de 1982 Arias Murueta Algo aun mas alla EDAMEX 1983 Raquel Tibol La Cultura de Mexico Cristales y Celulas Revista Politica abril de 1966 Diorama de la Cultura El Salon Excelsior septiembre de 1972 Difusuon Cultural de la UNAM Artes Plasticas Los Universitarios enero de 1977 Esther de Vecsey Arias Murueta Gerhard Wurzer Gallery Houston Tx 1980 Leonard Horowitz Art Speak Murueta That special painter s atmosphere p 3 Vol VIII No 6 1985 Art News Gerhard Warzer p 123 One man exhibition Galeria II Houston Tx 1981 Gustavo Arias Murueta Marionettes de Vecsey Edther Carolyn Hill Gallery 1985 10 Tiempo numeros 2083 2095 Tiempo S A de C V p 53 1982 19 El Hombre y la Violencia Revista de Bellas Artes numeros 31 36 1970 20 References edit a b c d e f g h The artist Mexico City Gustavo Arias Murueta Archived from the original on January 3 2017 Retrieved March 7 2013 a b c d e f Semblanza Summary PDF in Spanish Mexico City Camara Nacional de la Industria del Vestido Archived from the original PDF on November 12 2013 Retrieved March 7 2013 a b c Expondra Gustavo Arias obra retrospectiva en su galeria Gustavo Arias will exhibit his work in a retrospective at his gallery in Spanish Mexico City NOTIMEX November 19 2010 a b c d e f g h i Curriculum Gustavo Arias Murueta Resume in Spanish Mexico City Nucleo Arte Galeria March 8 2012 Murio Gustavo Arias Murueta un artista de ruptura El Economista Retrieved 2019 04 18 Camargo Angelina March 17 1980 Para que el Artista Sobresalga en Nuestro Pais Necesita Gran Vocacion y Disciplina Excelsior Mexico City a b Retrospectiva de Arias Murueta en el Club Piso 51 de Torre Mayor Retrospective of Arias Murueta as Club 51 of the Torre Mayor in Spanish Mexico City El Universal November 28 2010 Archived from the original on November 12 2013 Retrieved March 7 2013 a b c d Arias Murueta medio siglo de libertad Arias Murueta half centuryof liberty in Spanish Mexico City Milenio May 22 2011 Archived from the original on April 11 2013 Retrieved March 7 2013 a b Se reuniran destacados artistas plasticos de la ruptura en exposicion Distinguished artists from the Generacion de la Ruptura will reunite in Spanish Mexico City NOTIMEX March 8 2012 a b Gustavo Arias Murueta Marionettes de Vecsey Edther Carolyn Hill Gallery 1985 Arias Murueta Toby Eric Joysmith EDAMEX p 17 18 1983 ISBN 968 409 234 2 Tiempo Callado Difusion Cultural UNAM Secretaria de Comunicacion Jorge Reynoso Pohlenz 1999 La era de la discrepancia p35 38 46 55 y 458 Olivier Debroise Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Museo Universitario de Ciencias y Arte UNAM 2006 ISBN 968 9056 00 X Ignacio Asunsolo Escultor 1890 1965 Exposicion antologica Museo Nacional de Arte 1985 Raquel Tibol Confrontaciones cronicas y recuento Ediciones Samara 1992 Confrontaciones Raquel Tibol 1992 Evocacion del mural improvisado y colectivo de 1968 Revista Proceso Raquel Tibol 2010 1 Archived 2010 10 05 at the Wayback Machine Proceso Edicion 1768 a Color Archived from the original on 2013 10 16 Retrieved 2013 11 14 Cronica 1968 Daniel Cazes Plaza y Valdes 391 paginas 1993 Tiempo numeros 2083 2095 Tiempo S A de C V p 53 1982 result amp ct result amp resnum 8 amp ved 0CEwQ6AEwBw El Hombre y la Violencia Revista de Bellas Artes numeros 31 36 1970 result amp ct result amp resnum 1 amp ved 0CCsQ6AEwADgKLinks editOfficial Page of Gustavo Arias Murueta 2 Biographical Video of Gustavo Arias Murueta on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gustavo Arias Murueta amp oldid 1182752043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.