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Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts

Happy Cinco


I was delighted to find Magazo on La Paleteria, a site that reposted one of the Soviet space posters I put up the other day. The video was originally posted on Mexicovers.


Here are some of the album covers I found posted
there by Sr. Mexicant.







Tom Chambers's Mexican reveries

An enchanting journey in the Mexican countryside with "Dreaming in Reverse," a beautiful series of photomontages by American artist Tom Chambers. Sensing that little time remains to photograph the beauty of Mexico, Chambers have created this series to express both his concern for cultural loss, as well as his appreciation for the inherent loveliness of Mexican life. Employing magic realism, an art genre used in the early twentieth century in Mexico, Chambers has attempted to create images of Mexico which seem true and believable, but also perhaps improbable.

Thanks to technology and digital manipulations, Chamber's photomontages of surreal imagery folded into rural Mexican scenes become persuasive dreamscapes.
"Dreaming in Reverse" soaks up the evocative richness of painterly light and color, expressing both appreciation for the beauty of the reality in the settings, and the possibilities of nudging into some "magical place."


Glass Flower

Presumptuous Guests

Afternoon with Octavio

Visions of Clemencia

Seabird Mimicry

Two Chairs

Tethered Aviator

Caging the Songbird

Stuck In The Key of C

Ring of Fire

Transfiguration


"Dreaming in Reverse" is currently on view at the Wall Space Gallery, Santa Barbara, CA
All images, courtesy of Tom Chambers


This post is also featured on The Huffington Post





Primping for Day of the Dead


Illustrator and comics artist Ann Decker had enough foresight to leave the country before the Tea Party comes into power. She lives in Mexico now. Here are two paintings she has in a show for Día de los Muertos. I’m glad to see that Ann hasn’t totally forgotten NYC. She seems to have recalled Manhattan’s social x-rays perfectly.

Check out Ann's website to see more of her work.