Jose Orozco (1883-1949) was the most prolific of the muralistas, painting murals primarily in schools all over Mexico and the United States. He was also the adept at beefcake, using muscular men to signify what is important and valuable in the human spirit.
Others use more universal themes, such as "Prometheus," the Greek god who brought wisdom to humanity (in the Frary Dining Hall at Dartmouth College).
He often used arcane, mystical symbolism, tying him into the Western hermetic tradition where homoerotic activity was a conduit to godhood. For instance, "Omnisciencia," ("Omniscience," 1925), in the the Casa de los Azulejos in Mexico City, shows an ecstatic male figure, rays of power shooting from his torso, flanked by nude male and female figures who are being manipulated by half-hidden gods.
"Civilization The Coming of Quetzalcoatl" (at the Hood Museum) is a homoerotic masterpiece, combining Western esoteric and traditional Mesoamerican motifs. It shows five ancient Mesoamerican priests holding down a naked, muscular sacrificial victim, the knife posed like a phallus, with the Aztec god approaching as if he intends a sexual assault.
No indication if Orozco was gay. He was married, with three children, but during his era, many gay people married.
The best place to see his murals is in the Orozco Room at the Hood Museum, on the campus of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire (about 2 hours north of Boston).
Beefcakes are everythin', baby! 💪🏻🔥🙂
ReplyDeleteQuetzalcoatl...didn't accept human sacrifices. In fact, he was the only Aztec god who didn't.
ReplyDeleteSorry, a personal bugaboo of mine.
In Hispanic culture is very common for gay men to go into marriage of convenience because that is what Latino society expect one to do -Orozco seem to really enjoy painting naked men- maybe he slept with some of the models
ReplyDeleteBasically, if you marry and have kids, conduct yourself in a masculine manner, and never bottom, at least in Mexico, you're seen as no different than any straight man.
DeletePretty much North America prior to the late 70s; a century agO, perpetual bachelorhood wasn't seen as odd here, either.