Tina Modotti and the Mexican
Renaissance 8 April - 28 May 2000
Tina Modotti (1896-1942) was born
in Italy and moved as a teenager to
the US, where she found work in the
Hollywood film industry. She
became acquainted with the
American photographer, Edward Weston, who
taught her photography. Together with Weston she
travelled to Mexico, where after breaking with
Weston, she came in contact with left-wing radical
groups as well as the artists Diego Rivera and
Frida Kahlo. At this time she began to use her
camera to document their work but also as a
political weapon. She was finally deported from
Mexico to Europe and participated in the Spanish
Civil War on the Republican side. She was trained
as a Komintern agent in the Soviet Union and
worked for a time in Berlin. At the beginning of the
'40s and under an assumed name, she returned to
Mexico where she died in 1942. The photographs
included in the exhibition was made from the 1920s
to the end of the 1930s. Curators: Leif Wigh,
Patricia Albers and Sam Stourdzé
Tina Modotti and the Mexican Renaissance shows
Modotti's photography between 1923 and 1930
when she was working in Mexico. During the
1920s, together with her American mentor, Edward
Weston, Modotti introduced a new idea of
modernity in the form of "Straight Photography" to
Mexico. The exhibition at Moderna Museet also
reflects the impact of her photography on the
development of Mexican modernism during the
1920s and '30s.
Tina Modotti (1896-1942) was born in Udine in
northern Italy and grew up in poverty. Her father,
who was a mechanic, took his family to Austria for
a time. However, after a few years they returned to
Udine, and the father set off for America in order to
try to earn enough money to support his family. In
due course he sent for his wife and children who
came in stages to San Francisco, to the Italian
quarter of North Beach where he lived. Tina Modotti
herself landed in San Francisco in 1913, and as a
teenager, she found employment as a seamstress
in a clothing factory. In her free time she acted in
amateur theatre performances.
After a while, she managed to get a foothold in the
film industry in Los Angeles and Hollywood, acting
in various silent films - for instance in the
melodrama The Tiger's Coat (1919). Her
dark-eyed, somewhat exotic beauty came into its
own in femme fatal roles. During her period in
Hollywood in the early 1920s, she associated with
intellectuals, poets, writers, film makers and
photographers including Edward Weston, who had
already attracted a great deal of attention for his
uncompromising portraits. Weston was to have a
crucial impact on Tina Modotti's life for the rest of
the decade.
Modotti, who had seen Weston's photographs both
in the display case outside his studio and in
exhibitions, became his student. And shortly after,
they established a friendship that soon turned into a
passionate love affair. In 1923 Modotti and Weston
went together to Mexico, where they intended to
work as portrait photographers. Modotti worked as
Weston's darkroom assistant and studio stage
manager and learned how to take photographs.
They became acquainted with Mexican artists and
intellectuals, of whom Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo,
Ricardo Gómez Robelo, Guadalupe Marin, Xavier
Guerrero and Jean Charlot were amongst the most
significant.
At the end of 1924 Modotti began to liberate herself
from Weston and to work more independently,
while at the same time, her political interests began
to increase. In November 1924, she was
represented by ten photographs in a group show in
the Palacio de Mineria. In 1925 she became a
member of the communist organisation,
International Red Aid. To her ordinary work with
portrait photography she now added an interest in
social themes, focusing on everyday life and the
struggle for existence. Several of her photos from
this time depicted ideological questions in a
documentary manner, which caused cracks in the
relationship with the less political Weston.
Nevertheless, in 1926 they worked together on a
project documenting Mexican art for Anita Brenner's
book, Idols Behind Altars. Modotti was asked to
contribute to the magazine, Mexican Folkways and
in October of the same year she also contributed
pictures to the Exhibition of Modern Mexican Art.
After the opening of the exhibition, Weston left
Mexico and returned to California, while Tina
Modotti stayed behind. Although separated, they
remained friends for the rest of their lives. Modotti
was active in various Left Front organisations that
had relations with the Communist Party, in which
she became a member in 1927. Her photographs
became more clearly political and were shown in
exhibitions both in Mexico and California. Her
pictures were also published regularly in the radical
magazine, El Machete.
Modotti socialised with, amongst others, the
Communist leader, Julio Antonio Mella, who on an
evening walk with Modotti in January 1929, was
murdered by unknown assailants. Modotti was
suspected of the crime and placed under house
arrest for a time. Her large exhibition that opened in
December the same year in Mexico City's National
Library was condemned and she was accused of
being Mella's murderer. In early 1930 she was
imprisoned for alleged connections with a group
planning to murder Mexico's President. She was
released after two weeks, but was deported to
Europe, with Fascist Italy as her destination. With
the help of European Communists, she managed
to get free upon arrival in Europe and went to live in
Berlin, where she became a staff member of the
picture agency, Unionfotos. Shortly after, she went
to Moscow.
Despite a number of successful exhibitions in the
US, Modotti stopped taking photographs altogether
and devoted herself wholly to working for the
Communist Party. In 1936, during the Spanish civil
war, she worked for the International Red Aid at a
war hospital as a nurse, changing her name to
Maria. Three years later, when Franco's victory was
secure, she fled with other leftists to Mexico under
a false name. In 1941 she was guaranteed asylum
and reclaimed her real name. On the fifth of
January 1942, she was found dead in a taxi and the
details of her death have never been entirely
clarified.
Exhibition Curator: Leif Wigh
Moderna Museet
Stockholm,
SE Sweden