Tuesday, 12 November 2013

Powerful FIC exhibit:: Danos colaterales at Museo de Pueblo

This multifaceted exhibit was made up of sections with a double thread running through them, either assaults on identity.or other forms of cruelty. The last photo shows one panel of a two sided screen portraying the glory of Tenochtitlan and the Spaniards' slaughter of the inhabitants. A powerful work (not shown) was the stark photo of a drowned kitten taken by Claudia Reyes..The photos by the German photographer Walter Reuter, who loved his new country , provided a brief respite from the other works shown.

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Refugee Reuter left his bitterness behind in the Old World, grateful that Mexico provided a haven
                                         At the entrance to the exhibit, a seemingly innocuous set of seven blankets had covered corpses of Mexicans who died violent deaths.
The wooden sculpture we saw next resonated frighteningly with Amat Escalante's film Heli.

Above and below two prints in a series by Nahum B. Zenil


Rogelio Pereda's double-edged photo of a man-turned-woman after serving in the US military.
One panel from Gustavo Monroy's powerful New Screen after the Spanish Conquest. 


Monday, 11 November 2013

Museum tour: a way tto see Posada's work without making a trip to Aguascalientes

The meeting point is at 6pm at the galeria across from El Midi in Casa Cuatro. I'm sure the tour will head to the Museo del Pueblo which is hosting four exhibits in Jose Guadalupe Posada's honor.

                                                Satirist Posada not one to strive for political correctness

Did you know that the printmaker lived in Leon for more than ten years until the flood of 1888 washed out the taller where he worked, leading him to move to Mexico City. Undoubtedly the perfect place for graphic social commentary well understood by the many Mexicans of the time who could not read.

I don't know how long the exhibits will be at the museums.Recommended for art buffs, graphic art buffs and history buffs.

Saturday, 9 November 2013

Sherrie Posternak's Day of the Dead exhibit at the Dieguino



PhotoSherrie's exhibit opened at the Museo  Dieguino (between the Teatro Juarez and the Hotel San Diego) Friday night, her third exhibit in Guanajuato this year. Creating in many forms, this versatile artist offered her viewers many ways of seeing the interplay between life and death.  What could have been a better setting than the subterranean museum? The artist, who dressed as a calaca that would have done Posada proud, explained that her  family recollections and  her own sense of Mexican culture mix in this varied exhibit made from the intertwined threads of life and death.

Life:sepeating the marriage ritual seven times
Death: Sherrie dcarries out her theme 


Sunday, 3 November 2013

Dia de los Muertos Feria de Artesanias 31 de oct - 3 de nov

Craftepeople from out of town and local craftspeople showed their wares.at this four-day fair. According to the calendar I have, there may be a repeat from 15-18 of November (around the Day of the Revolution), followed by a Christmas Fair 20-30 of December.Norma - all in the building near the city offices in Plaza de la Paz.

This time, Lilia Fernandea, who taught humanities at the prepa for many years, was showing her hand painted and hand enbrudered rebozos:


Weavers, metalworkers, papier mache craftsman came too, several from San Miguel de Allende. Visitors to the exhibits could pick up cards for heading to the display rooms on a later visit.


Women from the Santa Rosa Cooperative brought their mermaladas (I bought quince) and sweet liqueurs. A smaller fair than usual but I hope worthwhile for both sellers and buyers.

Friday, 18 October 2013

Guanajuato artist Raymundo Gonzalez Nieto creating fantastic creatures

During Cervantino 41, I dropped in to the Dieguino Museum between Teatro Juarez and the San Diego Church to see the exhibit of this young artist's papier mache creations. What a delight! And the titles add to the fun. The museum space works well as the setting. And yes, there's a mermaid among his creations.

Friday, 4 October 2013

Old Wine in a New Bottle

Old Wine in a New Bottle: La novela perdida de Borges by Pablo Paniagua
. . . In a 21st century version of many a Guanajuato legend, the student intruders use a neighboring roof to get into the house where the treasure lies. . .

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I’ve just finished Pablo Paniagua’s short novel, La novela perdida de Borges, set partly in Guanajuato, Pablo’s home now for more than a dozen years.  The book, was published in an admirable edition by Indie Press, Leon, Mexico, with a new edition published in Spain now available through Amazon. Easy Spanish but you can be on the lookout for it in an English translation in a couple of years.

I was already a Paniagua fan after reading ExEx, a surrealist melodrama about a young Spanish woman with a mustache modeling in New York. In his debut novel, Paniagua concocted an intoxicating brew of fantasy, feminine daring, humor, erotic moments and violence, in those proportions. I found his clear, literate style a pleasure.

The new novel has similar ingredients, but a different savor. In this one, a randy young Spaniard wants to bed a beautiful upper-class Mexican student who accompanies him to hear a famous lecturer trash Jorge Luis Borges, the famed Argentine writer. The  strength of the young man’s erotic urge compels him to fly across the ocean with his bitchy paramour to, you guessed it, Guanajuato, where she is hell-bent on recovering an unfinished Borges manuscript while he pursues his private goal.
                                                                       
Paniagua describes both Guanajuato’s squalor and its beauty (“… a world with transparent, shining atmosphere, without gradations between sun and shade, like the ying and yang . . .) through the eyes of the first time visitors to the city. Later, in a 21st century version of many a Guanajuato legend, these student intruders use a neighboring roof to get into the house where their treasure lies. By that time, they have already shopped for needed tools for the burglary, sampled the local nightlife, stalked their prey--a violinist on a callejon renamed Gatos Muertos--and attended a symphony concert.

The writer has a flair for combining sexual fantasy with explicit physical details, but his book is more than entertainment. It is a collage of plot twists, place descriptions, mini-essays, bifurcations, duplicity and a believable/unbelievable portrait of a stage of life many of us have almost forgotten. His unrelenting list of the violence reported on Mexican television struck me as even more forceful than the headlines I pass at a newsstand every day.

The night I finished reading this page-turner, I woke up in the early morning feeling bothered. In fact, maybe the next to the last chapter does shift gears too suddenly. And why weren’t more place names transformed? But before I knew it, I was marveling at the ingenious way the whole book is put together. Instead of writing a farce with the characters playing tricks on each other, Paniagua plays a trick on his readers who don’t need to have read Borges (or Paniagua on fractal literature) to laugh when the rabbit jumps out of the hat.





                                              

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

On Mexico's best known rain god, Tlaloc & the Pastita Waterfall

The falls in the Pastita are even wider, more forceful and brown with dirt today than they were several days ago when I took the picture. Now that we're in the midst of the rainy season in Guanajuato, here's background on one of pre-Hispanic Mexico's most important rain god, the Nahua god  Tlaloc:


      "In the native manuscripts Tlaloc is usually portrayed as having a dark complexion, a large round eye, a row of tusks, and over the lips an angular blue stripe curved downward and rolled up at the ends. The latter character is supposed to have been evolved originally from the coils of two snakes, their mouths with long fangs in the upper jaw meeting in the middle of the upper lip. The snake, besides being symbolised by lightning in many American mythologies, is also symbolical of water, which is well typified in its sinuous movements."  from The Myths of Mexico and Peru [Kindle Edition]
this section also online at http://www.sacred-texts.c; you can see the image by going to http://archaeology.asu.edu/tm/pages/mtm47.htm or in person to the Templo Mayor. I am not reproducing it because it is under copyright.

om/nam/mmp/mmp05.htm

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

New Guanajuato legends?

I don't remember where I overheard a group of local primary school children, but it was clear they knew about Frida (Kahlo) and Diego (Rivera). I'm wondering if they know because it's in the air or hear about them at school or have been to the Diego Rivera house or know their faces are on the two sides of the Mexican 500 peso note or all of the above.

Watch for the special showing of Diego Rivera sketches in the right-hand gallery, main UG building, during the Cervantino.