MEXICO CITY, Aug. 28 (Xinhua) -- Print posters by the
most famous Mexican artists of the early twentieth century, including Diego
Rivera, will be shown in one of the world's most famous museums, the British
Museum, an art foundation announced here Friday.
The Aldama Foundation, a charitable foundation set up
by two philanthropists, facilitated the provision of 16 posters, produced
between 1936 and 1953 and costing 25,000 pounds (40,750 U.S. dollars), for the
British Museum's exhibition, the art fund said.
The 16 posters, including Diego Rivera's Emiliano
Zapata and His Horse, are part of the "Revolution on paper: Mexican prints
1910-1960" exhibition, which displays about 130 print posters by more than 40
Mexican artists.
The British Museum said on its website that the
exhibition was the first in Europe to focus on the great age of Mexican
printmaking in the the first half of the twentieth century.
The Zapata print is one of the 100 copies ordered in
1932 by a New York gallery. "It was bought from the granddaughter of the
publisher. It has never been sold or framed and is close to its original
condition," Aldama's statement said.
Zapata was a key leader in Mexico's 1910 revolution
and remains a hero to many Mexicans to this day.
Other major artists in the exhibition include Isidoro
Ocampo, Alfredo Zalce and Leopoldo Mendez.
"The British Museum is delighted to be able to add to
its collection the most famous print ever made in Mexico, which can now be put
alongside the masterpieces of other schools in the British national collection,"
said Antony Griffiths, who is Keeper of the British Museum's Department of
Prints and Drawings.
The exhibition will begin on Oct. 22 and run until
April 5 next year.