By Susan Page
To celebrate the many folk-art traditions related to the Day of the Dead, Galeria Atotonilco will hold an open house on both Saturday and Sunday, October 29 and 30, from noon to 5pm. The public is invited.
Why All These Skeletons?
Skulls and skeletons appear with great frequency in Mexican folk art, especially around the annual Day of the Dead holiday. The reason for this reaches far back into Mexican history.
More than 500 years ago, when the Spanish conquistadors landed in what is now Mexico, they encountered indigenous communities practicing a ritual that seemed to mock death. The Aztecs kept skulls as trophies, displayed them on walls and in temples, and used them during ceremonies to symbolize death and rebirth. The skulls honored the dead, whom the Aztecs and other Mesoamerican civilizations believed came back to visit during an annual ritual. Unlike the Spaniards, who viewed death as the end of life, the Aztecs viewed it as a continuation of life. Instead of fearing death, they embraced it.
The newly arrived Spaniards considered the ritual of using skulls barbaric and pagan and tried to eradicate it. But when, much like the Aztec ancestors themselves, the practice would not die, the Spaniards simply incorporated it into Christianity, or perhaps, more likely, the Aztecs brought it with them when they were converted. The closest the Catholics could come to a similar holiday was All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day, and gradually, the two traditions merged.
In about 1910, the cartoon illustrator José Guadalupe Posada created the “catrina” skeleton to make fun of wealthy Mexicans who thought the only worthwhile style was that of European aristocrats. That cartoon became an icon and gave rise to more skeletons in all folk-art mediums.
Duality in the Yin and Yang of Mexico
The skulls and skeletons used in Day of the Dead altars and seen widely in Mexican folk art are not about death but, rather, about the duality of life and death, a statement that death is an integral part of life—because the skeletons are never dead! They ride bicycles, sell their wares, shower, dance, get married, feed their children, and generally enjoy life. They accept death and even make fun of it. Some say they are laughing at the hubris of the living, who are foolish, fearful, and unappreciative of life. “You who are living,” they seem to say, “are rejecting the joy of life! You are not embracing each other enough! Watch us!”
So when you see a skeleton or skull in a piece of folk art, realize that you are viewing a powerful symbol, rife with meaning, and participating in a tradition that dates back 3,000 years or more. The duality of life and death that they represent is like the yin and yang of Mexican culture.
Day of the Dead Altars
Mexicans believe it’s critically important to keep the memory of loved ones alive by creating altars that honor them. They believe there are three deaths. The first death occurs when you stop breathing and physically die. The second death occurs when you are buried or cremated. And the third death occurs when no one living remembers that you existed. That is why Day of the Dead altars are so important. By remembering and honoring your loved ones, you prevent the third death.
Open House
Sat and Sun, Oct 29 and 30, noon to 5pm
Galeria Atotonilco
Type “Galeria Atotonilco” into your GPS
415 185 22 25