Showing posts with label color. Show all posts
Showing posts with label color. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Once Upon a Time, There Was a Fair....
I created this image for a contest sponsored by The Folsom Street Fair. The fair celebrates San Francisco vibrant kink, leather, fetish and alternative communities. I felt like the contest was up my alley! Sadly, upon visiting the Fair's website, I discovered that the contest had been canceled due to lack of interest. HEY, I was interested!! Anyway, I wanted to share the poster with you. Here is a detail:
The poster plays with many recurring themes in my work: The circus, cartoons, and fetish imagery. The bright, primary colors of the circus inspired the poster. I was also inspired by movies I saw as a kid, among them the terrifying sequence of Pink Elephants on Parade, from Dinsney's Dumbo. Here are more sources of inspiration:
The movie Santa Sangre, by Alejandro Jodorowsky is quite distubring, yet it is one of my favorites. The image below comes via Movie Outlaw, where you can read more about this wonderfully strange circus movie. I think Jodorowsky captured the bizarre world of Mexican circuses quite well. My favorite sequence is when the circus folks stage a funeral for a death elephant. The character of Concha (played masterfully by Blanca Guerra) is scary and unforgettable, sort of like Norman's Bates mother from Psycho....Mexican style. Guerra's eyes are like guns! She points, and shoots quite often during the movie.
Another circus movie that I used to watch was an Argentinian/Spanish movie called "Habia una Vez un Circo", (Once Upon a Time, There Was a Circus) about a sick little girl and her clown friends. The movie was fun, but scary at times. I remember a scary sequence when the little protagonist (the adorable Andrea Boca) runs into a window late at night, while having hallucinations about the circus. In this sequence, her clown friends come to her bedroom to cheer her up.
Thanks for reading this brief account of bizarre circus movies. If you are interested in attending The Folsom Street Fair, just visit their website for a schedule of events. Be warned, it is for adults only. The Fair is held in San Francisco in September the 25th, 2001. If you are interested in buying my poster, just let me know.
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Now on Sale! Heart Charms - Milagro Fabric

Friday, December 4, 2009
"Adornitos" - Holiday Ornament Kits
Las Posadas, or "Inns" are traditional Mexican Christmas gatherings. These parties are very colorful. Pinks, turqoise, charteuse and Rosa Mexicano (fucsia) are prevalent in decorations for a Posada. Decorations like piñatas, papel picado and paper lanterns called farolitos inspired me to design '"Adornitos", or holiday ornament kits. A base, cord, crepe paper, sequins, and other collage elements are included inside each baggy.
You'll have lots of fun designing the composition of your ornament and adding the trimmings. Additionally you can use materials you already have at home - wine corks, packing twine, recycled cardstock, paper doilies, etc. This season I will be posting some ideas and variations for the ornaments you can make. Enjoy!
You can also buy my kits at the Galeria de la Raza's Holiday Bazaar: Crucero Artero Navideño.
Monday, October 26, 2009
Chile Wreaths and Etymology
I was in Seattle recently for work and I got a chance to eat lunch at the famous Pike Place Market. After walking around I made my way to Post Alley and El Mercado Latino. This is rainy Seattle not New Mexico so I was surprised to see many gorgeous chile ristras and wreaths in so many shapes and colors! I took some photos for your enjoyment. All these chiles inspired me to write on the origins of the word "chile".
Chile or Pepper?
Christopher Columbus was the first European to encounter plants from the genus Capsicum in the Americas. In Spanish these plants came to be known as chiles (from their original Nahuatl name, chil). Columbus tried to pass these plants as the same spice known to Europeans as pepper. At the time pepper was highly priced in Europe, known as a spice, a preservative and a medicine. Black pepper (Piper Nigrum) is however from the family Piperacea, a spice native of South India. Columbus may have thought Capsicum and Piperacea were the same, since confused Europeans believed to be in India when the "new" word was first "discovered". This is the reason Native Americans are erroneously called "Indians", and why in English we are stuck with the same word (pepper) for two different plants.
Chile or Ají?
The South American country of Chile is long and skinny...but it is NOT named after a chile.
The name of the country has different roots than those of the chile pepper, originating from the Quechua chilli, a combination of the words "Chi", meaning trascendental and "Levu" (shortened to "Le"), meaning river. Loosely translated it means "The River of the Ancestors". Curiously, in South America the Spanish word for hot pepper is Ají picante, as opposed to chile, as it is known in Mexico and other North American Spanish speaking countries. However in all Spanish speaking countries black pepper is called pimienta a word similar to the Spanish word for bell pepper: Pimiento.
Chili or Chile?
"Chili" is the anglicisation of the word Chile, and it is used only in the US. It is also the name of the popular Chili stew made with meat, chiles and some times beans. The dish has its roots on food eaten in Mexico for centuries, basically meat seasoned with chiles, or "carne con chile", by its name in Spanish (literally it means "meat with chiles"). In the American Southwest the name of the dish (and the dish itself) went trough a reincarnation and became "Chili con Carne", or the powdered spice blend used to season this dish. The good folks of ChileTraditions mention that in 1983 New Mexico Senator Pete Dominici made an official congressional record on the correct way of spelling Chili: With an "E" at the end.
More fastidious chile grammar and slang
English speaking folks usually say "chile rellenos" or simply "rellenos" when referring to the dish consisting of battered stuffed peppers. The plural of the Spanish word would be "ChileS rellenos", if there is more than one.
So, rellenos or not, how HOT are chiles really? The chemical called capsaicin in the chile stimulates the papillary glands and dermis and produces a "burning" sensation, and make you release endorphins, creating a reaction similar to heat exposure. The chile itself doesn't produce heat. Eating chiles while in the middle of a snowstorm won't save you from hypothermia.
The spiciest chile is probably the Habanero. It is spelled HabaNero, not Habañero, since it is named after the city of La Habana, where the chile was traded. The origin of this chile, however, was the Yucatan peninsula and it is featured in many delicious Yucatecan recipes.
In Spanish when something is spicy it is called "picante", from the word "picar", meaning something that pierces like a needle or stings like a mosquito. In Mexico the word chile also has sexual connotations, it alludes to the penis.
So my friends...Al Chile (A slang saying, meaning: To the point!)
If you go to Mexico don't ask for chile "caliente", if you are expecting something spicy - you'll just get something warm. If you are a guy, don't ask for someone to heat your chile, unless you are expecting...Oh, never mind. If you go to Seattle, make sure you visit Pike Place Market.
Happy eating!
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Ronaldo Fraga: Fashion, Cartoons and Disney

What do theme parks, Mexican paper banners and fashion can possibly have in common? I would say a whole lot, after seeing the work of Ronaldo Fraga. Fraga is a Brazilian designer, his collection "Disneylandia" was part of Sao Paulo's fashion week. For his latest collection Fraga created an exuberant mishmash of Latin American folk tradition, theme park imagery, Disney kitsch and a bit of mid-century illustration. In the artists own words:
"My eyes melt with the thought of Mexican fiestas, Colombian textile handicrafts, emotional Argentinean cinema, Olinda’s carnival and its confetti and serpentine throws, and writings of Borges, Drummond, García Marquez, and Cortázar… all fronts of cultural resistance in a slippery world without frontiers. I think about how we, Brazilians, interact with our next-door neighbor – Miss Latin America –, who we barely greet when we meet in the elevator every day. In this collection I attempt to exchange cups of sugar with a neighbor who does not speak my language, but whom I can talk to through music, a graphic universe, political and religious discomfort, and the feeling of a possible place in the contemporary world."

A rickety wooden catwalk was created for the fashion show. The many passages made it resemble a labyrinthine favela, or Brazilian shanty town. The model's look was that of "Meme Mau", or what a friend of my grandmother's used to call the bastardized Mexican version of Minnie Mouse, by sporting enormous hair knots that resembled Mikey ears. Collars made out of little "chiclet" boxes, richly embroidered jackets, dresses stamped with Disney characters and Latin American flags were included in the collection. All the models had powdered pigment dusted on their foreheads, making them look as chimney sweeps from the movie "Mary Poppins". The pigment could allude to a splash of paint or the vitality that creates an animated character, or the ash people in Latin America wear on their foreheads during Ash Wednesday: Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Powdered pigment, to powdered pigment?


The collection may be best remembered for its amazing dresses inspired by "Papel Picado" or paper banners created for Mexican holidays. Fraga seems to specially like designs with skulls traditionally used during the Dia de los Muertos, or the Day of the Dead holiday. Papel picado in its ethereal fragility alludes to death and mortality. In this case, fabric mimics paper.


This collection may also have a connection with mid-century illustration. Some of Fraga's folky "boho chic" creations show influences from traditional "huipiles", or roomy blouses and dresses worn by women from the isthmus of Tehuantepec. The style of the Tehuana, what the women from this region are called, is often associated with Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, who popularized the look during the 1940's. The Tehuana costume also inspired Mexican illustrator and ethnographer Miguel Covarrubias (1904 - 1957) and American designer Mary Blair (1911 - 1978).

In the US, illustration styles of the 1940's to the 1960's reflected curiosity and discovery. The space race and the ability to travel to exotic locations fascinated North American audiences. Both Covarrubias and Blair benefited from travel and study "on site". Covarrubias spent years researching Olmec culture and the people and traditions of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, where the Tehuana costume originated. He had a theory that the native culture of Mexico diffused as far north as the Mississippi delta, and as far away as Easter Island. Here is one of his illustrations for his book "Mexico South", published in 1946.

Covarrubias was a successful illustrator and cartoonist. His work was published by The New Yorker and Vanity Fair. Like Blair, he was also a talented colorist.
Mary Blair also spent some time in Mexico studying painting, before going to work for Walt Disney in 1940. She later joined her husband, Lee Everett Blair, other creative professionals and Disney himself on a gig traveling to several Latin American countries. The project was sponsored by the federal government under Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Good Neighbor" policy, that was meant to oversee Latin America in a more "benign and peaceful" tone after years of interventionism. It was also meant to prevent and discourage anti-US sentiment. The reasons for Disney to participate were many. It was an opportunity to promote his studio using Uncle Sam's money, since the studio was strapped for cash. His artists researched the studio projects that would later become Disney's animated "The three Caballeros" and "Saludos Amigos". Here's some concepts created by Mary Blair.


Mary Blair moved on to create designs and concepts for some of Disney's classic animated movies, among them "Cinderella", "Peter Pan" and "Alice in Wonderland", but her aesthetic was forever influenced by the folklore and the color of Latin America. She was also the creative force behind the ride "It's a Small World". Originally one of four Disney sponsored attractions for the 1964 World's Fair in New York, the beloved (and at times hated) ride was also created from concepts developed by Mary Blair.


Much like "Its a Small World", Fraga's "Disneylandia" speaks to us of optimism, unity and nationalistic harmony in Latin America. But is real, or just light, glitter, plywood and paint? Is the perennial Carnival-like vision of Latin America gone, making way for cultural understanding, or do we still delight in the make believe cha- cha land, complete with margaritas and an obnoxious "hot tamale train" to ride on? Personally, I just think of the artisans, weavers, textile and garment workers in Latin America, and those of Latin American origin working in the US industry, and question the real role of indigenous artists in the fashion world. Ronaldo Fraga tells us of a different Latin America that has possibly arrived to the international design and culture arena on its own terms:
"Now I look at the neighbors of a Latin America I am not familiar with, an America different than the one with cucaracha generals and dictators who were lost in time, and different than the one who is denied a US visa or bears the heavy burden of corruption".I would add one caveat - the more that things change, the more they stay the same. Maybe the process has also gone full circle. A fashion designer inspired by a theme park; a theme park that drew inspiration from an illustrator, an illustrator that found her inspiration in the colors of Latin America. Small world, indeed.
Links and photo credits:
Check out Ronaldo Fraga's Flickr Photostream to view more of his work. You can also visit the designer's blog. Other photos by Camilo Gutierrez via Camilogr.com
The Covarrubias illustrations from "Mexico South", now out of print, come from the literary blog Bellemeade Books
The Mary Blair illustration comes from Littleverses. It includes photos from Mary Blair's Latin American trip from Life magazine, and more information about how her concepts helped influence Disneyland's look. Additional images by Peko-chan
This link is about the controversy of redesigning the ride "It's a Small World" by adding Disney characters and a patriotic "Up with America" sequence, and tampering with the original Mary Blair concept.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Inspiration Board: Gothic Mexican Wedding
The concept:
The inspiration for this board came from bull fights, the Day of the Dead holiday and embroidery. The colors are basic black and white and fuchsia (or "Rosa Mexicano" as we call it in Mexico). The feeling is slightly Gothic, but modern. I wanted to avoid the obvious chili peppers, maracas and colors usually associated with a Mexican theme wedding. Here's more information about the items, from right to left:
Bolero Jacket. The amazing southern gothic designs from Bayou Salvage are made with recycled, reclaimed and vintage materials. If you happen to travel to New Orleans make sure to visit them...or shop on-line at Etsy. The concept is southern gothic, but I think a senorita would feel right at home wearing one of their lacy bolero jackets. Guayaberas. Traditional Guayaberas are light weight shirts for men, they come in a variety of designs. The ones pictured in black and white are gorgeously embroidered, you can get them from Caracteristico. The pink and onyx earrings are from Bryan Johnson Creations. The Wedding Lasso is traditional in many Mexican weddings, it symbolizes the couple's new life together. In my board I included a double fresh Jasmine lei from leijl.com , instead of a more commonly used rosary shaped lasso.

The Cake
The beautiful black and white "brushed embroidery" cake is from The Butter Cream Studio in the San Francisco area. The realistic fuchsia anemone flowers are edible. Tracy, the owner and head baker is truly a cake artist!
The inspiration for this post: this topper is very detailed, but no taller than 3.5 inches tall. The bride and groom are cast together, they are carefully painted and decorated with tulle netting. Please contact me directly if you are interested in one, I can customize the colors of the figurine so it matches your wedding colors.

I wanted to keep the feeling of the board light and contemporary. An event like this could be held at a museum, art gallery or a hotel. The image in the inspiration board is from Habita Hotel in Monterrey, Mexico. Habita is a slick, modern hotel decorated in a clean and simple black and white palette.

The fuchsia anemones and eggplant mini calla lily bouquet comes from Ambience Floral Design, in Sacramento.
Labels:
color,
Events,
Flowers,
From my Studio,
Mexican Heritage,
Party ideas
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Hacienda Colors: Accurate splendor, or marketing ploy?
The folks at Hacienda Style have created a collection of paints for those that want to bring the feel of an hacienda to their own home! I like how they posted interior photos that illustrate the color swatch in a real room.
The names of the paints are aptly named in Spanish, from fun names like "Cantaloupe Sorbet" to others that invoke history like "Maya Gold". I could almost swear that my bedroom is painted in "Cantaloupe Sorbet". I also like how the colors are subtle, not the usual garish colors associated with Mexican design north of the border.




There are different schools of thought when it comes to haciendas in Mexico. Some folks see haciendas as bitter reminders of colonial times synonymous with exploitation of indigenous workers, while others see them as historic symbols of romantic times gone by.
The style and aesthetics of haciendas have received some new attention lately. Many of these properties have been restored by foreign nationals living in Mexico, and are now being used as tourist attractions and hotels. The folks at Hacienda Style literally wrote the book(s) on the subject.
In the same vein of different schools of thought: Is it this a wonderful effort to preserve and bring attention to a historic way of life, or an attempt to pre-package and market a period in time by non-Mexican folks...to a non-Mexican audience? What do you think?
If you are interested in the Hacienda Color collection visit Pittsburg Paint's "The Voice of Color"
The names of the paints are aptly named in Spanish, from fun names like "Cantaloupe Sorbet" to others that invoke history like "Maya Gold". I could almost swear that my bedroom is painted in "Cantaloupe Sorbet". I also like how the colors are subtle, not the usual garish colors associated with Mexican design north of the border.




There are different schools of thought when it comes to haciendas in Mexico. Some folks see haciendas as bitter reminders of colonial times synonymous with exploitation of indigenous workers, while others see them as historic symbols of romantic times gone by.
The style and aesthetics of haciendas have received some new attention lately. Many of these properties have been restored by foreign nationals living in Mexico, and are now being used as tourist attractions and hotels. The folks at Hacienda Style literally wrote the book(s) on the subject.
In the same vein of different schools of thought: Is it this a wonderful effort to preserve and bring attention to a historic way of life, or an attempt to pre-package and market a period in time by non-Mexican folks...to a non-Mexican audience? What do you think?
If you are interested in the Hacienda Color collection visit Pittsburg Paint's "The Voice of Color"
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
New fabric: Las Sirenas
Monday, February 2, 2009
Hearts, candy and the color red...


The first two images are from Jaime Hayon's Crystal Candy set, created for Baccarat (as seen at Yatzer). These crystal pieces do remind me of candy! The red crystal topped with white ceramic on the right looks like a combination of a heart, a hand grenade and a pomegranate. The second image is from a papier mache box that I created using newspaper, cardboard and acrylic paint.

A very philosophical fellow artist once told me that every day has its own color (cada dia tiene su color). It means that we should savor the unique differences of each day that passes by. But what about months? Do they have their own unique "shade"? With so many Valentine's day merchandise like roses, hearts and ribbons, red may as well be this month's color. And what color has more emotional connotations? Here's some curious musings about red:
Urban legends claim that more red cars get speeding tickets. Snopes debunks this myth here.
In China, red is considered a lucky color.
Bull fighters tease the bull with red capes.
To be "in the red" means you are loosing money.
Santa, as well as Satan and high ranking religious persons (like Cardinals and the Pope) are often depicted in red.
Red was associated with Communism.
In Santeria, red is associated with the Orisha Chango, the deity of thunder, war and fire.
In several countries red means "stop" or "caution".
James Dean wore a red windbreaker in the movie "Rebel without a cause". Can you imagine if he had worn, say, a powder blue jacket?
A burial site in Palenque, Chiapas, was discovered generously sprinkled with a pigment known as cinnabar, giving the bones of the mysterious woman buried there a bright red color. This picture of the so called "Red Queen" comes from Diario Yucatan

So, enjoy the color red this (or any other) month. Happy February!
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Holy Mole
If you are wondering about the name of the blog: I'm not talking about images of the Virgen de Guadalupe appearing on tortillas. This blog is mostly about things that I find inspiring as an artist, and about finding inspiration in unusual places.
Things that inspire me are like food for my creative soul. Just like food, I seem to crave them. For example, growing up in Mexico I remember being almost overfed with color. You could find stunning color on markets, folk art, comic books or street advertising. Some times I would feel starved for color. I would open and savored a new package of crayons, in the same way other kids craved candy.
What inspires you? Have you ever had a craving for something warm, gooey, saucy or spicy? Doesn't it feel like the flavor slaps your taste buds and wakes them up (making your jaw almost hurt)? Does perspiration starts to build on your forehead? Are you having a religious experience? I do get a rush when I explore a new art medium or by cooking a plate of chilaquiles or by visiting an art exhibit. Like an enchilada, art can either make you sweat, or it can nourish you...or even make you sick. The best thing is that it creates a reaction that makes you feel alive.
Welcome to my blog, I hope you enjoy the tasty morsels! ;-)
Things that inspire me are like food for my creative soul. Just like food, I seem to crave them. For example, growing up in Mexico I remember being almost overfed with color. You could find stunning color on markets, folk art, comic books or street advertising. Some times I would feel starved for color. I would open and savored a new package of crayons, in the same way other kids craved candy.
What inspires you? Have you ever had a craving for something warm, gooey, saucy or spicy? Doesn't it feel like the flavor slaps your taste buds and wakes them up (making your jaw almost hurt)? Does perspiration starts to build on your forehead? Are you having a religious experience? I do get a rush when I explore a new art medium or by cooking a plate of chilaquiles or by visiting an art exhibit. Like an enchilada, art can either make you sweat, or it can nourish you...or even make you sick. The best thing is that it creates a reaction that makes you feel alive.
Welcome to my blog, I hope you enjoy the tasty morsels! ;-)
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