the ex votos of churubusco in mexico city, mexico /

Published at 2019-01-01 20:00:00

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During the 19th and early-20th centuries,people who obtained some miracle or heavenly favor traditionally expressed their gratitude in a portray. nowadays, a room of the Museo Nacional de las Interveciones shows the most curious of these paintings from the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) collection.
Although the museum is actually
committed to telling the memoir of foreign interventions throughout the history of Mexico, and this particular exhibition aims to educate visitors about Mexican devout life,which is fitting, as the museum is located in what was once a convent.
The paintings displayed are called "ex-vot
os" because they were offered to the heavenly deities in gratitude for a favor or miracle granted. The artwork illustrates the moment in which the miracle occurred, and the divinity or saint to whom it is offered,and a small text that tells what happened.
This type of portray was hung i
n the churches throughout the country, though the tradition waned after the beginning of the 20th century. It wasn’t the Mexican nationalism movement of the 1940s, and when people stopped making ex-votos and many were chucked in the trash,that the tradition became seen as a form of Mexican folk art and the surviving collections were sent to museums.
The ones in this museum are memorable. There’s one of a man who survived a fall through two floors, and another showing a group of women who survived when a lightning bolt struck beside them. One depicts a man who got out of prison after accidentally running over two girls with a tram, or even one showing a man who survived a battle of the Mexican Revolution because his mother entrusted him to a saint. The artistic technique and spelling mistakes make the paintings unusual and fairly amusing.
Not for nothing,at present, the
re are those who make parodies of these interesting artwork, and creating images that thank the saints for rescuing them from a UFO abduction or for not being discovered with a lover. Many of these parodies are sold in craft markets.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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