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November 01, 2009
Mexico's National Museum of Death
Founded two years ago, it's in Aguascalientes.
Here's Chris Hawley's October 30, 2009 USA Today story about the museum, whose peak season is right now because of the November 1-2 Day of the Dead celebrations across the nation.
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Museum looks death in the eyes
Dead men may tell no tales, but death itself — well, in Mexico, the subject fills an entire museum.
The National Museum of Death, founded two years ago, explores the country's macabre interest in death and dying, from the mass human sacrifices of the Aztecs to modern-day Day of the Dead celebrations, which begin Sunday.
In its galleries, human skulls encrusted with turquoise grimace at visitors. Tiny skeletons gather around miniature banquet tables, toasting their own demise. The Grim Reaper glares across a room at a case full of bloody crucifixes.
"Mexicans have death imprinted all over their art and culture," museum director Jose Antonio Padilla said. "So why not a museum about it?"
The museum came about because a Mexican art collector had a lot of skeletons in his closet: dozens of tiny calaveritas, or skeleton dioramas, along with hundreds of other death-related artworks he had acquired over 50 years.
The owner, Octavio Bajonero Gil, was looking for a museum to take his collection. Meanwhile, the Autonomous University of Aguascalientes, a state college, was looking to found an art museum and wanted something different, Padilla said.
The museum, with Bajonero's donation as its core collection, opened in 2007 in two buildings owned by the university in downtown Aguascalientes. Admission is 20 pesos, about $1.53.
Reaction to the museum among Mexicans has been mixed, Padilla said, partly because the country is grappling with a wave of murders following President Felipe Calderón's military crackdown on drug cartels.
"People from (border cities in) the north say, 'Why do you want to celebrate something that I'm trying to avoid every day?' " Padilla said. "But this is not a museum of drug violence. It's a museum about a certain artistic tradition."
About one-third of the museum's 70,000 annual visitors are from other countries, mainly the United States.
"It's definitely kind of bizarre," said Spencer Garcia-Stinson, 24, of Gilford, N.H. "In the United States, we don't like to talk about death, but here they're dealing with it so openly. ... It's amazing."
Season of celebration
This is peak season for the museum because of the Nov. 1-2 Day of the Dead celebrations, when Mexicans honor their ancestors and recently deceased relatives.
The fascination with death has its roots in pre-Hispanic religions, Padilla said. Mayans, Aztecs and other cultures regarded death as an important step between life and reincarnation. The souls of one's ancestors were constant, invisible companions.
In one gallery, pre-Columbian sculptures show people cavorting with skeletons representing the souls of the dead. Others depict human sacrifices or the god Xolotl, who guides souls to the Aztec underworld.
One display shows clay sculptures of the hairless Mexican dogs known as xoloitzcuintles. Tribes on Mexico's Pacific coast buried these dogs with their dead to help guide them through the afterlife.
In another case, colored lights shine through a 2-inch-high skull carved from quartz crystal. Only three like it have been found in Mexico, Padilla said.
Other rooms include Roman Catholic images of death, such as crucifixes and a rare statue of the Virgin of Good Death, which is revered in some Spanish churches but is little-known in Mexico.
The collection also includes statues of "Saint Death," the grim reaper, which is increasingly worshiped at shrines and chapels in poor neighborhoods of Mexico.
Some museumgoers have tried to leave offerings for the grim reaper statues, said Juan Manuel Vizcaino, assistant director of exhibits. "We get some unusual people here," Vizcaino said. "Sometimes we have to remind them that it's a museum, not a place of worship."
Many of the cases hold calaveritas, the tiny clay skeletons thatare used, along with candy skulls and marigold flowers, in the altars that Mexicans build for their ancestors ahead of Day of the Dead events.
On the night of Nov. 1-2, many families hold all-night vigils at their relatives' graves. Some towns hold ceremonies with dances, music and displays of flowers.
Death from abroad
The museum also includes depictions of death from other countries, from American Halloween decorations to small replicas of the terra cotta soldiers of China.
Twentieth-century art is housed in a modern annex with blood-red windows. It includes posters from horror movies and calaveras, skeleton cartoons that are published in Mexican newspapers around Day of the Dead and are usually accompanied by satirical poems.
In one calavera from 1964, skeletons representing U.S. presidential candidates Lyndon Johnson and Barry Goldwater are shown dropping bombs on the Congo, Cuba and Vietnam.
The museum also hosts special exhibits, such as Death in Black Pottery, as well as seminars, art workshops and plays with titles such as The Fandango of the Dead and Blame Your Dead on Me.
Before visitors leave, they can visit the museum's coffee shop — The Café of Death — and a gift shop offering T-shirts and calaveritas.
Death's door opens at 10 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m.
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Slide show, from which the images above were selected, here.
November 1, 2009 at 04:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Rasta Dreadlock Hat — 'There's no FASTA way to go RASTA!'
From the website:
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Rasta Dreadlock HatIt used to take years to grow a decent set of dreadlocks.
But now you can instantly be mistaken for Jamaican with this ridiculous hat.
It's a colorful woven Rasta cap with a huge set of dreadlocks sewn right in.
Put it on and you're instantly transformed.
You'll find yourself walking to a Reggae beat, you'll feel carefree and hip, and you'll have an unexplainable urge to eat salty snack foods.
The Rasta Dreadlock Hat is made from 100% polyester, and one size fits everyone.
So, come on, mon... Stir it up!
Get yourself one of these hats and you'll be jammin' in no time!
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November 1, 2009 at 03:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Roy Lichtenstein Comic Girl Comes To Life
[via MAC, charmedtasha, Geekologie, Illusion 360, and Milena]
November 1, 2009 at 02:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
World's first stick-in LED tech toy
Just in from Roy Smith at Hi-Tec Art and way above my TechnoDolt™ pay grade — but not yours.
"Stop by our CES Booth 15725 for free swag and a hands-on demo."
Tell Roy (roy@hi-tecart.com) I sent you and you'll get bonus swag.
Maybe not.
November 1, 2009 at 01:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Top 13 Highest-Earning Dead Celebrities
From Forbes:
1. Yves Saint Laurent (above; $350 million last year)
November 1, 2009 at 12:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
CondeNastStore.com — At least they're not selling dirt (yet)
Hard on the heels of the New York Times Store comes Condé Nast beginning to circle the drain, opening up its archives and now selling all manner of art, photos and images featured over the years in its magazines, including late lamented now-defunct titles and those still with a pulse.
From the top, images of Babe Ruth, Lupe Velez,
Leslie Howard and
Katharine Cornell from Vanity Fair, circa the '20s and '30s.
Fair warning: there goes the day.
November 1, 2009 at 11:01 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Joey Chaos
David Hanson's creation
will sort you out.
November 1, 2009 at 10:01 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Pipette Vinegar Bottles
Designed by Camilla Kropp.
Eye dropper functionality.
Set of 2: $59.
[via noquedanblogs and evrt]
November 1, 2009 at 09:01 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
