Orozco, José Clemente
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists
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2003
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© The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists 2003, originally published by Oxford University Press 2003. (Hide copyright information)
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Orozco, José Clemente (1883–1949). Mexican painter, with his contemporaries
Rivera and
Siqueiros one of the trio of politically and socially committed muralists who were the dominant force in modern Mexican art. Following the first outburst of revolutionary activity in Mexico in 1910 (which was to last on and off until 1920), Orozco took up work as a political cartoonist. In 1912 he began a series of watercolours called ‘House of Tears’ dealing with prostitutes (a favourite symbol of human degradation for Orozco). The angry reaction of critics and moralists to these works was one of his reasons for leaving for the USA, where he spent three unhappy and unproductive years, 1917–20. His career as a muralist began after he returned to Mexico in 1920. The country was now relatively stable under the government of Alvaro Obregón, who encouraged nationalistic subjects as a way of creating a positive identity for the country after years of turmoil. Orozco's first frescos were in the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria (National Training School), 1923–4. They were controversial because of their caricatural style, and all except
Maternity and
The Rich Banquet while the Workers Quarrel were subsequently destroyed or altered. In 1927 to 1934 (broken by a brief trip to Europe in 1932) he again worked in the USA. This time he was much more successful, carrying out a number of important mural commissions, most notably a cycle for Dartmouth College, New Hampshire:
The Coming and
The Return of Quetzalcoatl (1932–4). This huge scheme showed his outlook crystallizing into a contrast between a pagan paradise and a capitalist hell. Unlike Rivera and Siqueiros, Orozco did not align himself with a political movement, but his work had an intense humanitarian mission. He returned to Mexico in 1934 with a big reputation after his success in the USA, and he spent most of the rest of his life engaged on mural projects in Mexico City and Guadalajara, the country's second city. In his last years his work became ever more violent in expression, moved by a passionate concern for the suffering and miseries of mankind. His studio in Guadalajara is now a museum dedicated to him.
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Saint mediation in the era of transnationalism: the da'ira of the Jakhanke marabouts.(prayer ritual of Muslim community affected by international migration)
Magazine article from: Africa; 3/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...protection of Jakhanke Jabi marabouts. ********** In 1926 the legendary marabout Al-Hajj Soriba Ibrahim...grouping the followers of a marabout or movement together...among the Jakhanke Jabi marabouts in Maka, strongly influenced...only the entourage of a marabout but also the weekly...
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Marabout women in Dakar: creating authority in Islamic knowledge.(Ndeye Meissa Ndiaye and Coumba Keita)(Report)
Magazine article from: Africa; 1/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...and their practitioners (marabouts) travel to Europe, the United...upon the life and work of two marabout women living in Dakar: Ndeye...amulettes) et leurs praticiens (marabouts) vont jusqu'en Europe...le travail de deux femmes marabouts qui vivent a Dakar : Ndeye...
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The Marabout and the Muse: new approaches to Islam in African literature.(Review)
Magazine article from: Africa; 6/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; KENNETH W. HARROW (ed.), The Marabout and the Muse: new approaches to Islam in African literature. Studies in African Literature, Oxford: James Currey; Portsmouth...
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RIGHTS-SENEGAL: CHILDREN DOING MORE BEGGING THAN STUDYING.
News Wire article from: Interpress Service; 9/23/2008; 700+ words
; ...Islamic scholar, or marabout, in Greater Dakar...Bafata, told IPS: "Our marabout is in Gudjewaye [a...get to Dakar." The marabouts refused to speak to...exploitation by their marabouts. IPS met with three...who he'd left with a marabout 3 years earlier. The...
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RIGHTS-SENEGAL: CHILDREN DOING MORE BEGGING THAN STUDYING
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 9/23/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Islamic scholar, or marabout, in Greater Dakar...Bafata, told IPS: "Our marabout is in Gudjewaye [a...get to Dakar." The marabouts refused to speak to...exploitation by their marabouts. IPS met with three...who he'd left with a marabout 3 years earlier. The...
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Child beggar's father fights abusive teacher
News Wire article from: AP Online; 8/16/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...at the school in June, his marabout handed him an empty tin can...it on biscuits. When the marabout found out, the boy says...children in his care, the marabout was netting $430 a month...take action against abusive marabouts. This is a sham on a grand...
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Islamic Society and State Power in Senegal: Disciples and Citizens in Fatick.
Magazine article from: American Political Science Review; 12/1/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...religious authorities (marabouts), citizen-disciples...Villalon argues that a marabout's initial popularity...been occasions when marabouts themselves have directly...identification of a major marabout with the political powers...the most powerful marabouts have sought to avoid...
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Child slaves of Senegal beg to fill their master's bowl ; CHRISTMAS APPEAL
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 12/19/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...He waits until the marabout is out of range before...and cockroaches. The marabout's horse is tied up...children are entrusted to marabouts for their education...reluctant agreement of the marabouts. We find four boys...Ossman, a well-groomed marabout, insists that the boys...
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A student's life: Forced to beg, beaten by teacher.(Front)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 8/17/2008; 700+ words
; ...press charges against the teacher, or marabout. "It was an accident and my son had no right to humiliate the marabout by doing what he did," he said...lying about why he was beaten. The marabout told investigators that he hit the...
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'This Is My Life'; Thousands of Senegalese Boys in Koranic Schools Forced to Beg
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 3/21/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...spiritual guides, or marabouts, to be taught about...childhood. Increasingly, marabouts are using the children...demanded Pape Seck, 25, a marabout at a Koranic school...least 300 francs for the marabout. That's about 50...the next generation of marabouts and their aides. Abou...
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Marabout
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa
MARABOUT A Muslim saint or holy person in North Africa. Marabout (Arabic murabit, literally...shrines. In earlier centuries, marabouts "tied" tribes to Islam and mediated disputes. Although marabout remains current in French...
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Marabouts
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Marabouts [Arab.,=devotee hermit], members...Spain in the 11th and 12th cent. The Marabouts later became known as holy men and were...to mosques. Their tombs, also called Marabouts, are often places of pilgrimage.
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Senegalese
Encyclopedia entry from: Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of World Cultures
...The remaining 10 percent are Roman Catholic. Marabouts play a unique role in Senegalese society: in orthodox Muslim communities, marabouts are teachers of the faith. In Senegal, marabouts became intermediaries between Allah (God) and...
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Amadou Bamba
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...19th century, becoming the founder and marabout of the Mouride sect of Islam. Many...every Mouride who had worked for his marabout and had given him his tithe would go to heaven because of the marabout's personal intervention; there would...
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Abd el-Kadir
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...province of Oran into a famous family of marabouts (holy men). He received a traditional...invaders. At the age of 24 this pious marabout became transformed into an energetic...Kadir, extended the control of the marabout over a portion of the province of Algiers...
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