Olga Costa: Dialogues with Mexican Modernism
By (Author) Sabine Hoffmann
Edited by Stefan Weppelmann
Contributions by B. Caro Cocotle
Contributions by D. Comisarenco Mirkin
Contributions by D. Garza Usabiaga
Contributions by A. Rager
Contributions by A. Lpez Rodrguez
Hirmer Verlag
Hirmer Verlag
2nd May 2023
23rd February 2023
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Paintings and painting
Society and culture: general
759.972
Hardback
256
Width 230mm, Height 270mm
1180g
In her elective home country of Mexico, the artist Olga Costa (1913-1993), a native of Leipzig, has long been established as an important female voice of Mexican Modernism. This volume presents impressively her autonomous artistic work between Mexican and European Modernism, and follows the traces of her life from Germany out into the world and back again. As the daughter of a Jewish-Ukrainian musician, the autodidact Olga Costa emigrated to Mexico in the 1920s, where she explored her new surroundings in her painting. Throughout her life she was not only inspired by people's everyday lives and the intensive colours of the landscape, but also by the dialogue with other artistic positions. It was not least Costa's examination of questions of cultural identity and feminism as well as her broad cultural-political commitment that made her one of the most important women artists in the circle surrounding Frida Kahlo.
Stefan Weppelmann has been the director of the Museum der bildenden Kunste in Leipzig since 2021. Sabine Hoffmann is Researcher in the Director's Office of the Museum der bildenden Knste Leipzig.