

PROPERTY OF VARIOUS OWNERS
Tina Modotti: Photographs (New York: Robert Miller Gallery, 1997), pl. 17
Other prints of this image:
Jesús Nieto Sotelo and Elisa Lozano Alvarez, Tina Modotti: A New Vision, 1929 (Centro de la Imagen, 2000), p. 76
Mildred Constantine, Tina Modotti: A Fragile Life (New York, 1983), p. 146
Frida Kahlo und Tina Modotti (Frankfurt, 1982), p. 23
Tina Modotti: Photographien & Dokumente (Berlin: Sozialarchivs, 1990), p. 99
Valentina Agostinis, Tina Modotti: Gli Anni Luminosi (Pordenone, 1992), p. 105
Margaret Hooks, Tina Modotti: Photographer and Revolutionary (London and San Francisco, 1993), p. 149
Sarah M. Lowe, Tina Modotti: Photographs (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1995), pl. 88
Dear Vocio: Photographs by Tina Modotti (University of California, San Diego, 1996), p. 15
Tina Modotti (Aperture, 1999), p. 61
Tina Modotti & Edward Weston: Mexican Years (New York, 1999), pl. 28
Tina Modotti and The Mexican Renaissance (Quercy, 2000), p. 111
Margaret Hooks, Tina Modotti 55 (London and New York, 2002), p. 91
Sarah M. Lowe, Tina Modotti & Edward Weston: The Mexico Years (London: Barbican Art Gallery, 2004), pl. 85
Dario Cimorelli and Riccardo Constantini, eds., Tina Modotti (Milan, 2014), p. 105
El Machete was founded by the Syndicate of Revolutionary Mexican Painters, Sculptors and Engravers in 1924 to communicate to workers the revolutionary cultural, ideological, and political concerns of the day. Because most of the Mexican population at the time was illiterate, the conveyance of information relied primarily on graphic design and photography. Its masthead slogan was ‘The machete is used to reap cane, to clear a path through underbrush, to kill snakes, end strife, and humble the pride of the impious rich.’ The paper became an official organ of the Communist Party in Mexico in 1925. Modotti’s friends David Alfaro Siqueiros and Xavier Guerrero were on the editorial board, and dozens of Modotti’s photographs were published on the paper’s pages. As a result, her work attracted the attention of art publications Creative Art, Mexican Folkways, and Forma.
This image was among the 57 photographs included in Modotti’s only lifetime solo exhibition, at the Biblioteca Nacional, Mexico City, in December 1929. Siqueiros, who delivered a presentation on the final day of the show called it ‘the first revolutionary photographic exhibition in Mexico.’ Modotti authority Sarah Lowe characterizes the image as ‘provocative, if not seditious.’ Aware of Modotti’s photographs and her political leanings, the Mexican government pressured her to renounce her beliefs. She refused, and two months later was expelled from Mexico (Tina Modotti & Edward Weston: The Mexico Years, p. 37).
Prints of this image are scarce. At the time of this writing, no other print of this image is believed to have been offered at auction.