The Devil you Say! The Saintly and Not so Saintly, in Folk Art

The Devil you Say! The Saintly and Not so Saintly, in Folk Art

The Devil you Say! The Saintly and not so Saintly, in Folk Art is an exhibition that aims to highlight the ascribed Christian concept of duality, good versus evil, and how that concept has historically shaped folk art practices in the Americas. the Latin American works included herein, are either early works that reflect a standardized formula of European training or are shaped by the artisans' interpretation of Christianity as understood and practices in a deeply rooted Indigenous/Mestizo identity. a section of U.S. American works is also included as it reifies religion-based folk art. This exhibition also includes works from Europe as well as works on paper. Finally, to complement and further provide context, we include accompanying excerpts from the exhibition catalogue written by collector and scholar Michael T. Ricker. We invite the audience to consider the works as a nod to both sides of one coin. The works selected for this exhibition come from a variety of cultures representing centuries of creativity. The inspiration of many of the artists in our exhibition, most of them anonymous, stems from personal belief, often of a profound nature. Some creations emerged from workshops, or near workshop environments, and were intended to meet market demands for devotional objects. Some works are decorative -- others are intended to be used in didactic of publicly devotional manner. some works are intended to profit from a buyer's unreasonable fear (or lack thereof), while others are objects of intense personal devotion, representing visions wildly abstracted from convention and difficult to reattach to established historical context. A few, defying any reasonable categorization, help keep the boundaries delightfully fuzzy.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: El Paso Museum of History; Michael T. Ricker

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Sixth Wall of Giants

Co -chair of Circle of Giants, David Saucedo speaking elegantly ...

Fort Bliss - Wall Of Giants

Cutting Ribbon Ceremony - 2015 - Celebrating Fort Bliss at the ...

Circle Of Giants - Fort Bliss

After the ribbon cutting ceremony for Fort Bliss. Circle of ...

Six Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss

Cake celebrating the Six Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss.

Sixth Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss, El Paso, Texas

Sixth Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss. Starting from the left: ...

Sixth Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss

Sixth Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss Seated is Lisa Heinemann who ...

Sixth Wall Of Giants - Fort Bliss

Sebastian G. Ribas - Normand ( Operations Manager) installing ...

ishine 2015

This year will be our first Youth National Day of Prayer in El ...

DIGIE

Behind the Digital Wall--this area is behind the screens for the ...

DIGIE

Behind the Digital Wall--this area is behind the screens for the ...

DIGIE

Behind the Digital Wall--this area is behind the screens for the ...

DIGIE

Behind the Digital Wall--this area is behind the screens for the ...

El Paso Police Officer George Herold - 1889 - 1916

George Herold is proudly wearing his badge, mounted and dressed ...

Muñoz Great-Grandparents

El Paso 1926. Leandro & Marina Muñoz

St. Ignatius Graduation

Luis Muñoz (right)

Officers W. N.Glover & Jesus M. Perez - 1913

Officers W. N.Glover & Jesus M. Perez - 1913

Chilled with chico

Found Chico at the interactive wall

Art museum visit

Saturday scout outing

Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles (1915-2013) was the first Mexican-American ...

Raymond L. Telles and Lyndon B. Johnson - El Paso, Texas

Raymond L. Telles was the first Mexican-American elected mayor ...

Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles (1915-2013) was the first Mexican-American ...

home.search_collection