Tina Modotti
Tina Modotti’s photographs blend formal rigor with social awareness. The Italian-born artist immigrated to the United States when she was 16. She acted in plays and silent films, and worked as an artist’s model during her first years in the country. In 1920 she met photographer Edward Weston, who mentored her and was a great influence on her subsequent work. By 1921 they had become lovers, and in 1923 they moved together to Mexico City, which had become a cosmopolitan center in the interwar years. There, cultural and political expatriates like Weston and Modotti, Sergei Eisenstein, and Leon Trotsky moved in bohemian circles with Mexican intellectuals and artists such as Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera. Modotti and Weston opened a portrait studio in the city.
With her camera, Modotti captured Mexico’s sights and people. She took its folk art and landscapes as the starting points for her most abstract images. Telephone Wires, Mexico isolates taut stretches of wire against a pale sky, finding gridded linearity in the skyscape. Staircase and Stadium, Mexico City record repetitions of stairs and shadows, creating complex images that push these architectural features toward abstraction.
Modotti’s social concerns emerge in photographs such as Worker’s Hands, a quiet celebration of a laborer’s dignity. Mella’s Typewriter reveals her leftist leanings and carries a subtle social heft. Modotti met Julio Antonio Mella, a Cuban revolutionary who was a hero among other Latin American radicals, in 1928, at a demonstration in Mexico City against the execution of the anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. The following year, Mella was assassinated as he walked home with Modotti by his side. Her photograph of his typewriter, his instrument for recording his beliefs, is a symbolic portrait of Mella’s life and work, and an emblem of her own Communist sympathies—which ultimately led to her exile from Mexico in 1930.
Modotti eventually settled in Moscow, where she joined the Soviet Communist Party. She gave up photography completely in 1931 to dedicate herself to political work. When she died in 1942 from congestive heart failure, she left behind a small but intensely influential body of work that reflects her appreciation for the Mexican working class, filtered through the precise formal vocabulary of her photographic practice.
Introduction by Kelly Sidley, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Photography, 2016
- Introduction
- Tina Modotti (born Assunta Adelaide Luigia Modotti Mondini, August 16/17, 1896 – January 5, 1942) was an Italian American photographer, model, actor, and revolutionary political activist for the Comintern. She left Italy in 1913 and moved to the USA, where she worked as a model and subsequently as a photographer. In 1922 she moved to Mexico, where she became an active Communist.
- Wikidata
- Q466946
- Introduction
- Modotti was born in Italy and moved to Mexico City in 1923 with Edward Weston, who taught her photography. She joined the Communist party in 1927, and thereafter her photographs focused on social and political issues in Mexico until she was deported in 1929.
- Nationalities
- Italian, American
- Gender
- Female
- Roles
- Artist, Actor, Photographer
- Names
- Tina Modotti, Assunta Luigia Modotti, Assunta Adelaide Luigia, Assunta Adelaide Luigia Modotti
- Ulan
- 500031886
Exhibitions
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510: A Modern Media World
Ongoing
MoMA
Collection gallery
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510: Machines, Mannequins, and Monsters
Oct 21, 2019–Sep 7, 2020
MoMA
Collection gallery
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Lincoln Kirstein’s Modern
Mar 17–Jun 15, 2019
MoMA
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Modern Photographs from the Thomas Walther Collection,
1909–1949 Dec 13, 2014–Apr 19, 2015
MoMA
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The Shaping of New Visions: Photography, Film, Photobook
Apr 16, 2012–Apr 21, 2013
MoMA
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Tina Modotti has
29 exhibitionsonline.
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Tina Modotti Roses, Mexico 1924
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Tina Modotti Elisa 1924
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Tina Modotti Convent of Tepotzotlán, Mexico 1924
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Tina Modotti Interior of Church Tower at Tepotzotlán 1924
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Tina Modotti Edward Weston February 1924
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Tina Modotti Cactus 1925
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Tina Modotti Workers Parade 1926
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Tina Modotti Calla Lily 1924-26
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Tina Modotti Yank and Police Marionette 1926
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Tina Modotti Oil Tank 1927
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Tina Modotti Illustration for a Mexican Song 1927
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Tina Modotti Worker's Hands 1927
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Tina Modotti Woman with Flag 1928
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Tina Modotti Staircase 1924-26
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Tina Modotti Mella's Typewriter 1928
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Tina Modotti Tehuantepec Type 1929
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Tina Modotti An Aztec Mother c. 1926-27
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Tina Modotti Baby Nursing c. 1926-27
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Tina Modotti Hands of Marionette Player 1929
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Tina Modotti Fiesta in Juchitán, Oaxaca, Mexico 1927-29
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Tina Modotti Cloth Folds c. 1924
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Tina Modotti Telephone Wires, Mexico c. 1925
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Tina Modotti Easter Lily and Bud c. 1925
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Tina Modotti House in Tehuantepec 1923-30
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Tina Modotti Roofs of Mexico City 1923-30
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Tina Modotti Woman with Olla c. 1926
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Tina Modotti Exterior of Pulquería, Mexico c. 1926
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Tina Modotti Stadium, Mexico City c. 1927
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Tina Modotti Hands Washing c. 1927
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Tina Modotti Child in Sombrero c. 1927
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Tina Modotti Mother and Child, Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico c. 1929
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Tina Modotti Tehuantepec Type c. 1929
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Tina Modotti Tehuantepec Type c. 1929
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