Abstract
English Abstract
In Art as Experience, John Dewey decried the estrangement of art from lived human
experience, both by artificial conceptual walls and the physical walls that secluded art
within museums. Instead he argued that making and enjoying art are crucial organic
functions that sustain communities and integrate individuals within their environments.
In the 1920’s Diego Rivera became one of the luminaries of the Mexican muralist
movement by creating frescoes that were rooted in Mexican life, both in their subject
matter and public location. Rivera and the other artists working within the government
cultural program guided by José Vasconcelos created murals that boldly expressed the
new values of democracy, peaceful revolution, racial equality and cultural pride. This
essay explores the deep resonance between Rivera’s most prominent murals from this
period and Dewey’s argument that art is a refined and integral feature of human
experience. In particular, this essay will examine the great extent to which these men
independently came to the common understanding that for people to thrive and grow
they need to create and experience art that grows out of and remains rooted in their
culture. Without claiming that either thinker influenced the other, this essay argues that
their works mutually inform and enrich each other. Both men sought to free art from the
museum, but where Dewey urged us tear down the walls that separated art from lived
experience, Rivera transformed walls themselves into murals that unified and educated
the people of Mexico and restored their culture.