Lot of 2 professionally framed works by Diego Rivera.

The outer dimensions of each are 20x16 and the print area is 11 1/2 x 8.

Please review the photos for best details.  Please note the damage to the top left side of the frame on "The Harvest".  It is approximately 1" long and could possibly be disguised with the gold leaf paint found in craft stores such as Michaels or Hobby Lobby.

I am sharing the information that I could find online to describe these pieces:

CUTTING SUGAR CANE (1931)
This fresco painting by Diego Rivera shows economic inequality on a plantation in the southern Mexican state of Morelos before the country’s revolution of 1910–20. In the foreground, an indigenous Indian woman with the distinctive braids and white clothing of a peasant, along with two children, harvests papaya fruits. In the middle- and background, men cut and carry heavy bundles of sugarcane as two foremen supervise. Rivera highlights racial characteristics to emphasize differences of social class between the workers, who have dark skin and hair, and the light-skinned blonde landowner who relaxes in a hammock on his porch, guard dogs at his side.

THE HARVEST 1946 
Diego Rivera (Mexican, 1886 - 1957). The Harvest (from the Ballad to the Revolution of 1910).  The original was painted in 1946.

These will be well packed for a safe delivery.

Thank you for looking !