Alfredo Ramos Martínez (1871–1946) was born in Monterrey, in the state of Nuevo Leon, Mexico. His father, Jacobo Ramos, a middle-class storekeeper, and his mother, Luisa Martinez de Ramos were strongly supportive of young Alfredo's artistic endeavors and at the impressionable age of only nine years old, he sent a portrait he had painted of the governor of Nuevo Leon to a competition in San Antonio, Texas and was awarded first prize.
Ramos Martinez spent eight years at the prestigious Academia Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, an experience that left him resentful as he believed the system devalued any sense of individuality in an artist. Fed up with the monotony of drawing from plaster casts, he often wandered away from the academy to paint scenes from ordinary life. His work caught the attention of American Phoebe Hearst, who arranged to financially support his studies abroad. In 1897, he arrived in Paris and continued his studies in the streets of the city embracing the style of the Post-Impressionists. It was here in Europe that Ramos Martinez began to paint on newsprint. As he explained later in an interview, while visiting Brittany in preparation for his Salon exhibition, he ran out of sketch paper. He asked his landlord if he had access to any good paper. When the landlord returned, he offered Ramos Martinez a stack of newspapers, which the artist reluctantly accepted.
Ramos Martinez returned to Mexico in 1910 and three years later he was appointed the Director of the National Academy. Although he protested at first, "I am the enemy of all academies," he later accepted the offer when he realized he had strong support from the students. He opened the first of his Escuelas de Pintura al Aire Libre (Open Air Schools of Painting) with an enrollment of ten boys, including a rebellious youth named David Alfaro Siqueiros, soon to become one of the most important Mexican muralists. Taking its cue from the Impressionist concept of painting in the outdoors, this revolutionary program initiated changes in both the theoretical and practical approaches to painting in Mexico bringing arts education within the reach of people of all walks of life.
Ramos Martinez married Maria de Sodi Romero in 1928 and a year later their daughter, Maria, was born with a crippling bone disease. Greatly grieved by her suffering, Ramos Martinez and his family left Mexico in 1930 seeking medical attention for her in the United States. They settled in Los Angeles where her condition was successfully treated. These circumstances would catapult Ramos Martinez's art in a new direction. The works produced in California at this time are abruptly modern, yet they focus on prevailing themes of the Mexican renaissance. He turns to the subjects he adored: the humble yet monumental Indian, the dramatic landscapes of Mexico and religious themes that reveal the fervent spirituality shared by his people. He explores the parameters of volume and space in his enormous oil on canvas portraits and his lyrical language of line and color are revealed in his elegant gouaches. The tender embrace of a mother and child, a grouping of vendedoras masterfully balancing baskets of abundant, colorful fruit on their heads, or a depiction of a processional of indigenous women dressed in warm tones of yellows and golds paying homage to the pre-Colombian deity, Quetzalcoatl, are beautifully rendered and even further dramatized by the texture of his chosen medium of newsprint.
Although considered by many to be the founding father of Modern Mexican Art, Ramos Martinez's astounding contributions to the development of Mexican and Southern Californian art has been dramatically overlooked. A prolific painter and an innovative teacher, Ramos Martinez has been a victim of circumstance; an inexplicable lapse in memory. At a time when Mexican art gained great momentum with the Mexican Muralist movement with such recognizable names as Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco, Ramos Martinez's substantial artistic vision had all been but erased. However, a truly great artist remains just that. "If Mexican modernism the product of the 1910 Revolution, which projected not only a utopian vision of the future, but also a return to Mexico's roots," as Hans Haufe states, "Ramos Martinez stands among the painters that initiated that movement." His legacy lives on and his work is now gaining the recognition it deserves.
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Alfredo Ramos Martínez |
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Mural Study for Vendedoras de Flores (Scripps College), 1945 |
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Súplica Supplication, 1942-45 |
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Mujer Meditando (Meditating Woman), 1942 |
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Tlacuachero, 1940s |
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La Virgen de San Juan (Virgin of San Juan), 1940 |
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Tazón de Frutas (Bowl of Fruit), 1939 |
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Platanal (Banana Plantation), 1939 |
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Pintores, 1938 |
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Mujeres con Flores (Women with Flowers), 1938 |
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Autoretrato (Self Portrait), 1938 |
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Vendedoras de Frutas (Fruit Vendors), 1937 |
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Ramo de Flores, 1937 |
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Mujer Sentada, 1937 |
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Madre India (Indian Mother), 1936 |
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La Familia India (The Indian Family), 1936 |
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En El Rancho, 1936 |
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Virgen y niño (Vergin and Child), 1935 |
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Sin Título - Mujer Con Flores (Untitled - Woman with Flowers). 1935 |
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Mujer con Taza, 1934 |
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El Indio, 1934 |
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Dos Hombres con Sombreros (Two Men with Sombreros), 1934 |
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Cordillera Mexicana (Mexican Mountain Ridge), 1934 |
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Los Primeros Americanos (Adan y Eva Mexicanos) The First Americans (Mexican Adam and Eve) 1933 |
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Las Floreras (The Flower Vendors), 1933 |
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Pareja India (Indian Couple), 1932 |
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La Familia, 1932 |
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Pueblo Scene, 1930s |
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Vendedoras de Fruta (Fruit Vendors), 1930
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Manca Coyota, 1930 |
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La Malinche, 1930 |
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Vendedora de Alcatraces (Calla Lily Vendor), 1929 |
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View of a Town, 1920s |
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Portrait of an Old Man, 1910-30 |
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