The New World Mexican Women

The New World Mexican Women of Tecalpulco, Mexico

New World Women is a native women artisan group in Tecalpulco, Guerrero who decided to form a production cooperative. These skilled artisans are the original designers and producers, creating beautiful jewelry. Theirs is a cottage industry with a goal of perpetuating the region’s craft tradition and creating a source of work that can keep their […]

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Leonora Carrington. Aurora.

Leonora Carrington in Mexico City: perspective of a person, place, and time

The year was 1966. America was mired in an unwinnable and unconscionable war. The Civil Rights movement was about to burst on the scene after generations of festering below the surface of White consciousness. And all over the so-called free world, a restless energy was growing among the youth that was to become a formidable […]

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Abraham Lincoln and Mexico: A history of courage, intrigue and unlikely friendships

Available from Amazon Books:   Paperback or Kindle The United States and Mexico struggled through volatile years of suffering and carnage to become unified nations. Michael Hogan’s thoroughly researched and passionately written Abraham Lincoln and Mexico is a thought-provoking read that covers part of that struggle from 1822, when Americans settlers first arrived on Mexican territory, to 1867, when […]

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Saturnino Herran: A Bright Light Too Soon Extinguished

At least ten years before the “Big Three” – Rivera, Orozco, Siqueiros – came into their own as world-renown muralists, a lone painter was setting the groundwork. His name was Saturnino Herran. He was the first Mexican artist to envision the concept of a totally Mexican art. And he laid the foundation for the development […]

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Amate Art

Amate Art of Mexico – (Where the Secular Meets the Sacred)

Nowhere was the cord between man and spirit more tightly bound than in the making of amatl, the sacred paper of the pre-Hispanic peoples. This paper was so important to the spiritual needs of the community, that in spite of intense repressive measures by the Spaniards, it has continued to survive and is still used to connect […]

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The legacy of Agustin Victor Casasola

The legacy of Agustin Victor Casasola (Photographer 1874 – 1938)

Agustín Victor Casasola was not a painter or a poet or one of the many intellectuals or revolutionaries during the early decades of the twentieth century who consciously strove to forge a Mexican identity. Yet, as witness and recorder of those tumultuous years, his influence was as great and may prove to be more lasting. […]

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Maria Izquierdo. El Hombre

Maria Izquierdo – Monumento Artistico De La Nación

On October 25, 2002, one hundred years after her birth , the Mexican painter Maria Izquierdo was declared a Monumento Artistico de la Nación by Mexico City’s National Commission for Arts and Culture. This guarantees that her work will be protected, catalogued, studied, and conserved to ensure that her legacy will be there for future […]

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