TINA MODOTTI AND THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION
There is a new play off broadway entitled "MODOTTI" which is described
as "an amateurish portrayal" of Tina Modotti who was a revolutionary activist
and world class("the greatest unknown in the 20th century")photographer
who had a symbiotic and romantic relationship with Edward Weston.At the
same time a comprehensive retrospective of her work is being exhibited in
Vienna at Kunst Haus Wien who name her"one of the most fascinating
woman of the 20th century"(see attached link)
A close friend of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera,she had several husbands not
all of them(including Frida's Diego)her own.Truly more of a revolutionary than
Frida she was the favorite model for Rivera's murals and Weston's photos.
In the movie "FRIDA" Tina was played by Ashley Judd .If the movie "TINA"
comes about ,and I hope it does ,Judd would be my nominee for the role.On
May 27 she received a masters degree in public administration from
Harvard;then three days later joined her husband ,Dario Franchitti, in
Indianapolis as he claimed his second trophy for winning the INDY 500.
For reasons I have never been able to explain(even to myself) the role of the
women in the Mexican Revolution--a unique phenomenen in history-- has
always been a subject of interest to me.On November 20 this year the
Revolution(always spelled with a capital"R") will mark its 100th
anniversary.Hopefully,I will finally find the time and make the effort to discuss
and demonstrate the subject in greater length by then.
At least a million lives were lost in the Mexican Revolution in a nation whose
population then numbered only 15 million.We consistently mourn(and with
justification)the loss of 600,000 lives in our own civil war when our
nation's population was 35 million.There are other interesting comparisons but
among them is the uniquely different role performed by thousands of women.
One of Tina Modotti's famous(in Mexico) photographs is the one shown below
in that it summarizes indeed epitomizes what women did and meant to the
Revolution This does not mean that Tina intended this interpretation:
CORN represents food which Mexican women cooked and prepared,foraged
for,and would often steal.The armies of the Revolution had no
commissaries;women filled that gap.The armies could not subsist without
them. The BANDOLIER represents the military role of tens of thousands of Mexican
women who fought and who often led troops of men and women into
battle.Some became generals.Several were colonels.
The GUITAR reminds us that all of the music of the Revolution is about
women:"Adelita"(the national anthem of the Revolution),"La Valentina"and "La
Cucaracha" are all songs about women.If the lyrics seem frivolous in this
revolutionary context just remember Hemingway's reminder(about another
war) that" men marched to their death while singing them"."Lorena" was an
equivalent song in our own civil war.
Tina Modotti
Bandolier, corn, guitar
1927