Ángel Zárraga y Argüelles
(Durango, 1886-Mexico, 1946) Mexican painter and poet.Very soon he began to combine his interest in the visual arts with his innate literary vocation, and the sum of both creative activities made him one of the great figures of Aztec culture of the first half of the 20th century.
As a member of the Mexican diplomatic corps, for several years he was stationed in Paris as cultural attaché to the Aztec embassy.In the French capital, Ángel Zárraga y Argüelles had the opportunity to establish contact with the main artistic figures of the moment, to learn about the latest trends and currents in European art and to participate in different groups such as the Society of Decorating Artists of Paris, which provided the opportunity to extend the field of his artistic creations to the noblest spaces of old Europe.
Thus, the Mexican painter was commissioned to execute the frescoes that decorate the crypt of the church of Suresnes, the Via Crucis of the church of Meudon and the murals of the University City of the French capital.With these and other similar works, the prestige of Ángel Zárraga as a muralist and decorator of large spaces achieved international fame, for which, on his return to his native Mexico, he was commissioned other works of extraordinary repercussion (such as, for example, the decoration of the select Bankers Club or the painting of the apsidal chapel of the Monterrey cathedral).
As a poet, Ángel Zárraga y Argüelles left many echoes of his experience abroad in his lyrical production, as well as abundant aesthetic notes that must be related, in an obligatory way, with their plastic activities.Among his best-known collections of poems, those entitled Ode to France and Three poems stand out.
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