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NEWS
RELEASE 10TH & OAK STREETS For additional information: FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE Oakland Museum of California presents The Oakland Museum of California presents its 12th annual celebration of Días de los Muertos (Days of the Dead) October 12–December 4, 2005. In this year’s presentation—CaliVera: Days of the Dead Altars Remixed—guest curator Jaime Cortez and the artists explore how this ancient Mexican and Central American spiritual tradition honoring the dead has inspired artistic expressions unique to California’s spirit. “Days of the Dead is a mystical and sensuous immigrant to the Golden State,” Cortez said. “The celebration has given thousands of Californians a more accepting and even playful attitude toward death. In exchange, it has been transformed by the quirky, inventive, and cosmopolitan spirit of our state. This year’s exhibition, CaliVera, reflects how this ancient spiritual practice has been infused with new life in California.” The museum will host its festive Days of the Dead Community Celebration Sunday, October 23, from noon to 4 p.m. in the gardens. This free public party features crafts and demonstrations, music, dance, a ceremonia (ceremony), costumed revelers, and a mercado (market). See page 3 for a calendar of all Días de los Muertos programs. Artists Maria Carreño dedicates her altar to Ralph Maradiaga, a founder of Galería de la Raza in San Francisco, and invites visitors to enter the realm of Nepantla, a place of spiritual healing. Artist Carlos Cartagena illustrates life as an intermediary phase, in which we are lent a body to pass the journey. Cartagena dedicates his altar to those who give themselves to causes that elevate human life, and who leave the world a more beautiful place. Caleb Duarte honors the Asian tsunami victims and the power of the ocean and earth. Duarte acknowledges the duality between the grief of loss of life and the inevitability of natural disasters, and accepts death, suffering, and nature as beauty. Patrick “Pato” Hebert’s ofrenda mourns the death of truth in a time of war with a symbolic wishing well in search of truth and hope. In his butsudan, or Buddhist-inspired altar, Al Lujan’s symbolic and innovative use of zempasúchil (marigold petals), honors Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender (LGBT) youth. By depicting works of art, such as the Olmec head and Aztec temple and gods, Rhode Montijo’s mural honors his Mesoamerican ancestors. He uses Mesoamerican imagery such as butterflies to represent their belief that after death one will turn into a butterfly and ascend to the sky. (Celia Herrera Rodríguez regretfully had to cancel her participation in CaliVera.) Andrea Vargas-Mendoza, her father Dr. Roberto Vargas and the Vargas family headed the community ofrenda honoring painter Jack Vargas, who passed away from AIDS in 1995. Family and friends throughout California helped make this ofrenda, featuring more than 500 paper flowers, one of Jack’s favorite subjects. Berkeley’s Longfellow Middle School and Sequoia Elementary School of the Oakland School District contribute traditional Días de los Muertos ofrendas to the exhibit, with the help of artists Rachel Anne Palacios and Debra Kopperman. Guest curator Jaime Cortez is pursuing an MFA at UC Berkeley. He has exhibited in galleries throughout Northern California and served as program manager of Galería de la Raza, in San Francisco’s Mission District. His fiction and essays have appeared in more than a dozen anthologies and journals. Background The practice of celebrating Days of the Dead in the U.S. began in the privacy of immigrant family homes. The practice grew tremendously during the Chicano pride movement of the early 1970s. Over the years it has become identified with the regional traditions of the states of Oaxaca and Michoacan, where commemorations include elaborate home altars, all-night candlelit vigils at the cemetery, and, in Oaxaca, beautiful sand paintings. The tradition of Días de los Muertos extends beyond Mexico and Central America into the American West and Southwest. Days of the Dead Programs Community Celebration Teacher Feature! Deadbeat: Poems and Songs to the Dead and the Not-So-Dead Gallery Talks with Artists Sunday, November 20, 2005 at 2 p.m. Family Explorations!
New book release! 10th Annual Días de los Muertos Fruitvale Festival – Sunday, October 30. For more information call 510/535-6900 or 510/535-6904. The Oakland Museum of California is devoted to the state’s art, history, and natural sciences. The museum is located at 1000 Oak Street at 10th Street in downtown Oakland, one block from the Lake Merritt BART. Museum hours (Sept. 17, 2005–Jan. 22, 2006, during Baseball As America) are Wednesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sunday, noon to 6 p.m.; first Friday of the month open until 9 p.m. Admission is $8 for adults, $5 for seniors and students with ID, free for children five and under. Free admission the second Sunday of the month; Baseball As America excluded. For more information, call 510/238-2200 or visit www.museumca.org.
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