- Antonio Rivas Mercado
Antonio Rivas Mercado (
26 February ,1853 –3 January ,1927 ) was a Mexican architect, engineer and restorer. His most notable project was the design of the Independence Column in downtownMexico City . He was father ofAntonieta Rivas Mercado .Rivas Mercado was born in
Tepic in the then Territory ofNayarit , but his parents decided to send him to study inEurope at the age of 10. Eventually, he studiedFine Arts andArchitecture at theÉcole des Beaux-Arts inParis, France from where he returned to Mexico City in 1879 to practise as an architect and teach at the Schools of Engineering and Architecture (today part of theNational Autonomous University of Mexico ).Among his various projects figure the house that eventually became the
Wax Museum of Mexico City (1883); the restoration ofHacienda s of historical importance such as the Hacienda of Tecajete in the State of Hidalgo (1884), andChapingo in the State of Mexico (1900); the customs building inTlatelolco , (1884); the restoration of several government buildings including thefacade of the Town Hall in Mexico City (1887); and his own house (1898) in Mexico City, now preserved as a historical building.The Teatro Hidalgo in Guanajuato, which he built between 1892 and 1903, is considered to be one of the finest buildings of the period. The neoclassical exterior and neo-moorish interior are a clear reflection of his eclectic architectural style. In 1902 he was commissioned by President
Porfirio Díaz to design and build the Independence Column on occasion of the 100th anniversary of the beginning of theMexican War of Independence . The project, which he realised in collaboration with sculptorEnrique Alciati , was finished in 1910, the same year of the anniversary.He was Director of the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City from 1903 to 1912. He instituted new methods of study and design and is said to have modified the curriculum of the "Architecture and Civil Engineering" major in order to make two different ones out of it. During his tenure he managed to rise enough money to fund
Diego Rivera 's scholarship to studypainting in Europe. He moved back to Paris shortly after his tenure ended. However, he returned to Mexico in 1926 and died a few months later in Mexico City, aged 74.ee also
*
Enrique Alciati
*Porfirio Díaz
*El Ángel References
#cite book|author=Turner, Jane (Ed.)|year=1996|title=The Dictionary of Art|location=New York | publisher=Grove's Dictionaries |id=ISBN 1-884446-00-0
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