Andrés Iduarte Foucher was born on May 1, 1907, in Villahermosa, Tabasco, then known as San Juan Bautista. As a result of the arrival of the Mexican Revolution conflict to Tabasco in 1914, his family moved temporarily to the cities of Ciudad del Carmen, Campeche, and Mérida, before turning back to San Juan Bautista once order was reestablished in the city; this experience would be later put down by Iduarte into an autobiographical book entitled Niño, child of the Mexican Revolution. In 1919, his family moved to Mexico City as a consequence of his sister Eloísa's health problems, who got Spanish flu. In Mexico City he continued his studies at Dr. Hugo Topf College and at the Mexican College ; by 1922 he enrolled in high school at the National Preparatory School where he studied till 1925. In 1926 he enrolled in Law School at the National University. Being influenced by José Vasconcelos' ideas, he promoted the autonomy of the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Between 1928 and 1930, Andrés Iduarte travelled to Paris and he joined the Latinamerican Student Association where he met other Latin American personalities such as Carlos Quijano, Miguel Ángel Asturias, César Vallejo, Gustavo Machado, Eduardo Machado, Manuel Ugarte and Gabriela Mistral. In 1930, just barely 23 years old, he became History Professor at the National Preparatory School and he codirected the National University Magazine He continued his studies at the Central University of Madrid, Spain, and became Secretary of the Hispano-American University Federation, a member of the Scholar University Federation, and Secretary of the Iberoamerican Division of the Athenaeus of Madrid. He lived there for six years; there he supported the republican cause before the Spanish Civil War, in which he actively participated in the trenches. From 1939, Andrés Iduarte became Hispano-American Literature Professor at Columbia University, where he got his doctoral degree, remaining there till 1952. In 1952 he was designated General Director of the National Institute of Fine Arts in Mexico; there he had among his fellow associates important artists such as Andrés Henestrosa, Celestino Gorostiza, José Durón and Pedro Ramírez Vázquez, who were chairmans of the Literature, Theatre, Music and Architecture Departments, respectively. In 1955, he was dismissed of his duties by then president Adolfo Ruíz Cortines, for allowing the Soviet flag to be laid upon Frida Kahlo's coffin at her funeral, as willed by her beliefs. From 1961, Iduarte returned to Columbia University where he eventually became Emeritus Professor. Among the recognitions he obtained, was the First Award of the Martí's Pro-Centennial Commission in Essay written by Foreigners in Havana, 1951, on his work Martí, Writer On July 17, 1978, the Juárez Autonomous University of Tabasco and the state government of Tabasco awarded him with the Silver Juchiman for Arts. Andrés Iduarte got married twice to the same woman, Graciela Frías Amescua, though they never had any children. On April 16, 1984, Andrés Iduarte died in Mexico City.