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I've spent the past twenty years of my life trying to catch up to where I am, and I'm going to spend the rest picking up where I left off. Check out my link to The Art House Co-op then enjoy my Blog with alittle music. Ya gotta scroll down, then up baby. Oh yeah, don't forget to feed my fish while your down there.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Dia de los Muertos - A Celebration of Life

La Calavera Catrina ('The Elegant Skull') is a 1913 zinc etching by Mexican printmaker José Guadalupe Posada. The image has since become a staple of Mexican imagery, and often is incorporated into artistic manifestations of the Day of the Dead in November, such as altars and calavera costumes. The etching was part of his series of calaveras, which were humorous images of contemporary figures depicted as skeletons, which often were accompanied by a poem.

The word catrina is the feminine form of the word catrín, which means "elegant". The figure, depicted in an ornate hat fashionable at the time, is intended to show that the rich and fashionable, despite their pretensions to importance, are just as susceptible to death as anyone else.




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