Taller de Gráfica Popular


The Taller de Gráfica Popular is an artists' print collective founded in Mexico in 1937 by artists Leopoldo Méndez, Pablo O'Higgins, and Luis Arenal. The collective was primarily concerned with using art to advance revolutionary social causes. The print shop became a base of political activity and abundant artistic output, and attracted many foreign artists as collaborators.

Foundation

The workshop was founded in 1937 following the dissolution of the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios.
Initially called the Taller Editorial de Gráfica Popular, its founders built upon a rich tradition of printmaking in Mexico, particularly the legacy of José Guadalupe Posada and Manuel Manilla.
Under President Lázaro Cárdenas, the work of the Taller supported the government's policies, including the Mexican oil expropriation.
In 1940, muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros launched an armed assault on the residence of exiled Russian Revolutionary Leon Trotsky, using the Taller's print shop as a headquarters and including some artists affiliated with the Taller in his squad.
There was some collaboration between the TGP and the artists of the New Deal-era Works Progress Administration, including Rafael Tufiño.
Artists from outside Mexico came to work and study at the Taller, including Mariana Yampolsky, the first female member of the Taller, who arrived in 1945 and remained until 1960, and Elizabeth Catlett, who worked with the Taller from 1946 to 1966. Both took Mexican citizenship. During the Civil Rights Movement, Chicano and African American artists produced work at the Taller. The collective became an inspiration to many politically active leftist artists; for example, American expressionist painter Byron Randall went on to found similar artist collectives after becoming an associate member.
The TGP faced financial instability and had to relocate several times, but Jesús Álvarez Amaya kept it running until his death in 2010.

Work

During its heyday, the Taller specialized in linoleum prints and woodcuts. It produced posters, handbills, banners, and portfolio editions. The art supported causes such as anti-militarism, organized labor, and opposition to fascism.
The art was often made through the collaborative process, and the Taller took the anti-commercial policy of not numbering prints, but it sold prints as part of and was the first political publishing workshop in Mexico to do so.
Under the brand La Estampa Mexicana, the TGP sold song lyrics, posters of heroes, Mexican culture, and Left movements worldwide. It also gave rise to a new generation of Calaveras, the Mexican tradition of humorous poetry ridiculing politicians and other popular figures. The raised fist emerged as a graphic symbol of resistance and unity.
It still working on art and social issues and it is located in Dr. Manuel Villada 46, Colonia Doctores, Mexico City.

Decline

After decades of steady progress, El Taller de Gráfica Popular began to decline due to political repression, internal divisions, and shifting artistic priorities. Several key events contributed to this decline. In 1960, David Alfaro Siqueiros was arrested and accused of social dissolution, marking an intense period of government repression. As political restrictions began increasing, tensions within the TGP worsened, leading to ideological fractures that weakened the collective's unity. Around the same time, the emergence of "El Movimiento de Liberacion Nacional", commonly known as MLN, following Lazaro Cardenas' presidency, introduced new political dynamics that further fragmented the collective. Soon after, ideological and strategic disagreements among members led to irreversible fractures. Key artists, including Francisco Mora, Xavier Guerrero, Elizabeth Catlett, Alberto Beltran, and Maria Luisa Martin, have departed, contributing to the collective's gradual decline.

Legacy

Despite these challenges, the legacy of the TGP transcended its initial mission, adapting to new social and artistic movements. Internationally, the TGP's influence extended beyond Mexico, shaping Chicano and Black art movements in the United States between the 60s and 70s. Its printmaking techniques and commitment to social justice inspired politically engaged artists who used graphic art to challenge imperialism, capitalism, and racial injustice. Although collective projects and political posters became less frequent, the TGP's tradition of producing "Las Calaveras," prints that reflected on political, social, and economic events, remained a staple of its artistic output. These works, created annually since the collective's founding, have become a widely recognized cultural practice, ensuring that the TGP's artistic and political legacy has endured. In the late 1990s, the government of the Mexican Federal District granted the collective a building under the direction of Alvarez Amaya, ensuring its continued presence. The TGP's model of collective political printmaking experienced renewal in 21st-century Oaxaca, where groups including ASARO, Colectivo Subterráneos, and Lapiztola employ relief printing and democratic assembly structures to address contemporary issues such as indigenous rights and state violence.