Marín was the subject of portrait paintings by Rivera, Frida Kahlo and Juan Soriano.
In 1976, he received an award from the VII International Painting Festival in Cagnes-sur-Mer, France.
San Juan | Juan Carlos I of Spain | Don Juan | Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico | Juan Gabriel | Juan Perón | Juan Pablo Montoya | Strait of Juan de Fuca | Juan Ramón Jiménez | Juan Luna | San Juan, Metro Manila | San Juan Islands | San Juan, Argentina | San Juan del Sur | Juan Manuel Santos | Juan Gris | Juan | Old San Juan | Juan Mónaco | Juan Luis Guerra | Juan de Padilla | San Juan de la Maguana | Maricel Soriano | Juan Martín del Potro | Juan López de Padilla | Colegio de San Juan de Letran | Soriano | San Juan Pueblo | San Juan Capistrano, California | Juan Ponce de León |
A new generation began at Casa del Lago when notorious figures such as José Luis Ibáñez, Leonora Carrington, Juan Soriano, Octavio Paz and even Juan José Arreola, who along with Miguel Gonzalez Avelar, to name a few, began to promote Poetry Out Loud, Chess Tournaments and the Philatelic Club.
With the show Conversando, con Cristina Pacheco, she profiles people in the arts and popular culture such as writers, musicians, artists, artisans, sports figures, which have included Portuguese writer José Saramago, Catalan lyricist Joan Manuel Serrat, painters Juan Soriano and Perro Aguayo .
The museum also hosts a permanent collection of art from Gelsen Gas, Frida Kahlo, Olga Costa, Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, José Clemente Orozco, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Leonora Carrington, Rufino Tamayo, Juan Soriano, and Vicente Rojo.
Prominent members of the movement include José Luis Cuevas, Vicente Rojo Almazan, Roger von Gunten, Alberto Gironella, Vlady, Juan Soriano, Lilia Carrillo, Arnaldo Coen, Pedro Coronel, Enrique Echeverria, Manuel Felguérez, Fernando Garcia Ponce, Brian Nissen, Gabriel Ramirez, Kazuya Sakai and Gustavo Arias Murueta.
Crichton shared the latter years of his life with Juan Soriano, in Eastbourne and later in Barcelona, where Soriano came from.
In its first three years, sales surpassed a half a million pesos, with the main beneficiaries being Rufino Tamayo, Luis Nishizawa, Guillermo Meza, Carlos Orozco Romero, Raúl Anguiano, Ignacio Beteta, José Chávez Morado, Juan Soriano, Juan O'Gorman, Olga Costa, Federico Cantú, Gustavo Montoya and Fanny Rabel.