Carmen Mondragón

María del Carmen Mondragón Valseca, also known as Nahui Olin (b. Tacubaya, today Mexico City, July 8, 1893 – d. Mexico City, January 23, 1978) was a Mexican artist's model, painter and poet.

Nahui Olin
Born
María del Carmen Mondragón Valseca

(1893-07-08)July 8, 1893
DiedJanuary 23, 1978(1978-01-23) (aged 84)
Spouse(s)Manuel Rodríguez Lozano
RelativesGerardo Murillo,
Matías Santoyo,
Antonio Garduño,
Eugenio Agacino
Modeling information
Hair colordark brown varying to blonde
Eye colorgreen

Biography

Carmen Mondragón was the fifth of eight children of General Manuel Mondragón, Secretario de Guerra y Marina in 1913 and inventor of the Mondragón rifle. Her mother was Mercedes Valseca. Carmen Mondragón received a privileged, private education in Mexico. Afterwards, she spent from 1897 to 1905 in France, it was there she learned to speak French fluently.[1] The professional activities of General Mondragón, who specialized in artillery design, led the family to Spain in 1905, where she met cadet Manuel Rodríguez Lozano, whom she married on August 6, 1913. Although her father, General Mondragón, was exiled to Belgium following the Decena Trágica, Carmen Mondragón moved to Paris with her husband,[2] where they met Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and Jean Cocteau. Afterwards they moved to San Sebastián, Spain, where Carmen's brother Manuel ran a photo studio. In San Sebastián, she started painting.[1]

In 1921, Carmen and her husband returned to Mexico and separated. Whether they were ever officially divorced is unknown. Carmen Mondragón turned towards the artists' scene of Mexico City; becoming acquainted with José Vasconcelos and Xavier Villaurrutia. Additionally, she was interested in the Teatro Ulises movement. She had multiple sexual affairs. Her beauty is described as mesmerizing and erotic, and she was apparently the first woman in Catholic Mexico to wear a miniskirt. She became model of several notable painters and photographers, among others posing for some of Diego Rivera's murals, for Tina Modotti, Antonio Garduño, Roberto Montenegro, Matías Santoyo, Edward Weston and in 1928 for Ignácio Rosas at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes.[3] Especially her nudes became famous. When a former French teacher of her recognized her pictures, he published A dix ans sur mon pupitre (From my desk, at 10 years old), a book of 1924, which describes the 10-year-old pupil Carmen Mondragón within his teacher's sight. Carmen Mondragón had an intense love relationship with Gerald Murillo, also known as Dr Atl, who named her "Nahui Olin", a symbol of Aztec renewal meaning "four movement", the symbol of earthquakes. They lived together in the former La Merced Cloister. At this time she wrote her poems Óptica cerebral, poemas dinámicos (1922) and Calinement je suis dedans (1923), finished several naïve paintings, and composed. As intensely as the love relationship began, it ended equally quickly in the mid-1920s. Later she denied it completely. After having several further affairs, she stepped out of public life in the 1940s.

She gained greater recognition posthumously; following a similar trajectory of fame as that of Frida Kahlo's. Carmen Mondragón is considered a talented and revolutionary women who both embraced and shaped the 1920s and 1930s in Mexico through her activism and creativity. She has been likened to Guadalupe Marín, Antonieta Rivas Mercado, Frida Kahlo, Tina Modotti, Lupe Vélez and María Izquierdo. Unlike Kahlo, her popularity was due more to her enchanting beauty than to her artistic and literary work. She reflectively described her work as intuitive. All her self-portraits show oversized, green eyes, but her eyes seem highlighted also in paintings by other artists. Many of her works are undated.[4][5][6][7][8]

Her works were exhibited in the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago in 2007, in an exhibition titled A Woman Beyond Time/Nahui Olin: una mujer fuera del tiempo.

Literature

  • Adriana Malvido on YouTube: Nahui Olin, la mujer del sol, ISBN 84-7765-206-6, ISBN 978-84-7765-206-9
  • Pino Cacucci: Nahui, 2005, ISBN 88-07-01686-9
  • Dr. Atl: Gentes Profanas En El Convento, ISBN 970-727-034-9, ISBN 978-970-727-034-3
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References

  1. Arias-Jirasek, Rita, ed. (2008). Women Artists of Modern Mexico: Mujeres artistas en el México de la modernidad/Frida’s Contemporaries:Las contemporáneas de Frida (in English and Spanish). Alejandro G. Nieto, Christina Carlos and Veronica Mercado. Chicago/Mexico City: Frida National Museum of Mexican Art/museo Mural Diego Rivera. p. 136. ISBN 9781889410050.
  2. Las hijas del porfiriato (Spanish), July 25, 2007.
  3. Primera exposición para descubrir el valor de la obra de Agustín Jiménez (second photo from top) in LaJornada, October 25, 2007.
  4. Hernando Hernández Pérez: Nahui Olin (I) (Spanish), September 13, 2007.
  5. Hernando Hernández Pérez: Nahui Olin (II) (Spanish), September 14, 2007.
  6. Erin Cassin: The Fiery Spirit of Carmen Mondragón, 2005.
  7. Enrique López Aguilar: Así te fuiste, Nahui, tan collando… (Spanish), LaJornada, UNAM.
  8. also used: Carmen Mondragón in the Spanish Wikipedia; version from August 19, 2008, 00.17
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