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 FIESTAS & CELEBRATIONS

La Fiesta de San Juan

Fiestas and historical celebrations in Tucson and Arizona borderlands.​ La Fiesta de San Juan June 24 2014
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La Fiesta de San Juan
La Fiesta de San Juan 2014

El Día de los Muertos / Day of the Dead

Tango at El Tiradito  2019
My playful interpretation.
​
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Tango at El Tiradito
Tango at El Tiradito 2019

Fiesta Grande Street Fair

One of my fondest memories in business as La Corua was providing the promotional art and graphics for the Fiesta Grande committee for a couple of years.  Sadly, this proud tradition was put on hiatus but I so look forward to its return one day! It was the best Chicano street fair in the Southwest, IMHO -- they had it goin' on. I donated all my posters and digital files to them for future use.  Andale!

(Artist's tidbit - what I loved most about this project was rekindling old memories of living Lowrider Culture  in the L.A. Harbor area, 1960's-70:
​The now classic music. Cruising the strips on weekends. Chicano and Surfer car clubs showing off. (Yeah, there were plenty of white on brown gang fights.) Sneaking booze into community dances where bands like the fledgling El Chicano and Malo were playing...)​
Fiesta Grande Poster 2014
Fiesta Grande Promotional Poster 2014
Fiesta Grande T-shirt design 2015
Fiesta Grande T-Shirt Design

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La Corua-Baboquivari-Mts
*  La Corúa  was a large, fierce looking but benevolent water serpent that lived in springs of water and protected them. They say it had a cross on its forehead and cleaned the veins of water with its long fangs or tusks. It was a shy creature but could sometimes be caught sunning on the rocks of the spring.  According to Sonoran folk beliefs, if one killed the Corúa, the spring would dry up.  Vanishing water sources and  economic pressures have pushed the folklore of La Corúa  to the dustbin of history on both sides of the border, but La Corúa remains in the minds and memories of elders in the Pimería Alta.

Serpents have been sacred for millennia to indigenous peoples throughout the Americas and are respected as guardians of water sources and bringers of rain.

* Beliefs and Holy Places - A Spiritual Geography of the Pimeria Alta  -  James S. Griffith, University of Arizona Press, 1992

Background painting:  Baboquivari Peak - the monolith landmark defining the Baboquivari mountains southwest of Tucson. The center of Tohono O'odham cosmology, it is sacred and is the home of I'itoi, their Creator and Elder Brother. The peak is visible from Casa Grande in the northwest, south into Mexico.  (I'itoi is also the figure in the O'odham 'Man in the Maze' basket design.)

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