Woman with a Bird Cage

Description

Woman with a Bird Cage combines Rufino Tamayo’s deep appreciation of ancient Mesoamerican art with his interest in Cubism, the 20th-century abstract art movement created by artists Pablo Picasso and George Braque. The influence of Cubism is apparent in the woman’s body, which Tamayo fractured into planes of color. Yet her distinctive elongated ear, large nose, open mouth, and the other aspects of her form reflect the Indigenous artist’s study of West Mexican ceramic sculptures (similar examples of which are on view in Gallery 136), which he collected enthusiastically. The synthesis of the two styles suggests his desire to introduce personal aspects of his Zapotec identity into modernist painting.

Provenance

Rufino Tamayo; Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1942.

Woman with a Bird Cage

Rufino Tamayo

1941

Accession Number

44084

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

109.4 × 83.8 cm (43 1/4 × 33 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Joseph Winterbotham Collection

Background & Context

Background Story

Rufino Tamayo's Woman with a Bird Cage shows a woman with a bird cage, a subject that suggests themes of freedom and captivity. Tamayo's treatment is characteristically simplified and richly colored.

Cultural Impact

Tamayo's works often explore the tension between tradition and modernity in Mexican life.

Why It Matters

This woman with a bird cage evokes themes of freedom and confinement.