Alfredo Rodriques

27
CLICK

description

 

Transcript of Alfredo Rodriques

Page 1: Alfredo Rodriques

CLICK

Page 2: Alfredo Rodriques

A painter born in Tepic, Mexico, in 1954

This is one of the best of the best artists who painted life in the mountains. Cheaters, Indians, and the great American landscape are part of the favourite topic of Rodríguez.

The work of Alfred is impregnated with a truly amazing chromatism and its design is a perfection of a series, its field of art is amazing.

His work is found in major museums and collections, and reference was made to it in many books and publications. .

Page 3: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 4: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 5: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 6: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 7: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 8: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 9: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 10: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 11: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 12: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 13: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 14: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 15: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 16: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 17: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 18: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 19: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 20: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 21: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 22: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 23: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 24: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 25: Alfredo Rodriques
Page 26: Alfredo Rodriques

Before the discovery of America, on the north of this continent there were in total about 5 million native people (inhabitants). At the end of the nineteenth century it remained less then 250,000 of them. In the same period the white population of the United States grew from 0 to 75 million. The white people usurperd the Indian territories and its people, who lived there for centuries, destroying their traditions, their way of life, and their hunting grounds by decimating the buffaloes that had been the pillars of their livelihood. The Indian people were forced to live in Indian reservations in the 1830s. The imprisonment of the Navajo people in Fort Sumner in 1864, and the indistinct murder of Wounded Knee in 1890, is an example of the savage destruction of Indian population, forcing them to adapt the "white culture". Out of many peace treaties that the white distinct governments signed with the Indian tribes, NOT one was RESPECTED.

Page 27: Alfredo Rodriques

TRANSLATED by: