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Visiones Sagradas, Sacred Sights
Fifth Annual Dias de los Muertos Festival Exhibit
Since 1999, the Museum of Anthropology has hosted a Dias de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) Festival Exhibit, in collaboration with the Calaca Cultural Center, in which local chicana/o artists, community members and ASU students create unique altarpieces memorializing the dead.
This years exhibit featured over 40 individual altars. The exhibit theme Visiones Sagradas, Sacred Sights was inspired by traditional traveling altars or cajitas. Taking the form of tryptichs, suitcases and even matchboxes, cajitas have often been used in Mexico during religious pilgrimages. In the North however — where many families have moved from place to place — creating cajitas has sometimes replaced the traditional Day of the Dead visit to the family cemetery.
Los Dias de los Muertos is an important celebration among Mexicans and Mexican-Americans that blends Aztec and Roman Catholic rituals and meanings. Los Dias de los Muertos embraces the inevitability of death while celebrating the lives of loved ones who have died.
Past altars have been dedicated to, among others, beloved family members, those who perished crossing the US-Mexican border, the soldiers of Iraq, Cesar Chavez, the Virgin of Gaudeloupe, the sun/moon and Frida Kahlo.
Links:
• Samples of our 2004 Cajitas (please check back later for an online exhibition)
• 2004 Press Release
• 2004 Participation Guidelines
• 2004 Artists Guidelines
• 2004 Schedule of Events
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