The murals were painted by Diego Rivera in 1925-1928, and they were all commissioned by the famous Mexican intellectual Vasconcelos, who was the education minister and initiated major changes in the Mexican public school system. At the time, he was a supporter of the Mexican mural movement.
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The murals were painted by Diego Rivera in 1925-1928, and they were all commissioned by the famous Mexican intellectual Vasconcelos, who was the education minister and initiated major changes in the Mexican public school system. At the time, he was a supporter of the Mexican mural movement.
Museo Mural Diego Rivera. This is a small museum, mainly showing a famous mural "Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Central Park" completed in 1947, covering an area of 4.8 meters x 15 meters.
Located on the third floor of a building in the National Palace, the stairs on the first floor are a large mural, which consists of multiple parts, each part is a famous historical moment and turning point in Mexico's history. This huge mural is called Mexican history. It's Rivera's most famous work.
If you want to see the murals of Diego Rivera, come here. Very few marks, it looks like only one security guard will be very private, but once you get in, you can see the murals of Rivera three stories high. The building itself is beautiful too. Don't miss it. It can counter the frenzy of the Frida Museum (I'm glad we came, but too much to see for visitors). I think the other five we saw might be from the Department of Education