Post by account_disabled on Feb 20, 2024 1:14:14 GMT -5
The pieces talk about the rituals, parties and dances of the Bolivian carnival. The event is today at the Inés Córdova-Gil Imaná House Museum. AGENCIESfebruary , (: a.m.) One of the pieces on display./ CRC One of the pieces on display./ CRC TAGS: COLLECTIVE SAMPLE TRADITIONS Taypi Utasa Collective opens exhibition “Disproportionateness and Traditions” The rituals, dances and games of the Bolivian carnival celebration are captured in the exhibition “Desmesura y Tradiciones” by artists from the Taypi Utasa Collective. The exhibition will open at : p.m. this Wednesday at the Inés Córdova-Gil Imaná House Museum, which is located on de Octubre Avenue on the corner of Aspiazu. Admission is free. The exhibition is organized by the Center of the Cultural Revolution and the Inés Córdova-Gil Imaná House Museum, dependent on the Cultural Foundation of the Central Bank of Bolivia (FC-BCB), and the Taypi Utasa Collective, made up of artists who graduated from the Academy National Fine Arts "Hernando Siles".
The exhibition “Disproportionateness and Traditions” brings together works related to the celebration of the Bolivian carnival: the encounter, the traditions, the humor and the unrestricted Cell Phone Number List nature that makes the party. Between rituals, parties and dances, the strength and devotion of this festivity will be observed,” according to the press report from the Center of the Cultural Revolution. The Taypi Utasa artist collective is formed by Nelson Guido Saico Alarcón, Julisa Mamani Mitta and Matías Ramos Rivera. The exhibition will have the special participation of the creators Gabriel Emyl Gonzales, Germana Montalvo and Milton Siñani Nina. The name of the collective refers to a meeting point. In the Aymara language, utasa means our house and taypi, the center of the earth, “a meeting point where negative and positive forces can coexist,” according to its members.
We wanted to take this meaning from the encounter we had between people with different ideologies and energies, who came together to learn and discover more about the world they are passionate about,” the artists explained. This is one of the last cultural activities of this year, within the calendar of art shows and exhibitions in the country, already at the closing of the different folklore entrances in Oruro, La Paz, Cochabamba and Santa Cruz; within which the most notable was that of the 'land of Socavón'. President Luis Arce highlighted this Monday that the majestic Oruro Carnival once again captivates the country and the world with its splendor and expressed his pride in “our traditions and customs.” “We show the immense cultural wealth of our majestic Oruro Carnival, which has once again captivated the country and the entire world with its splendor,” the head of state wrote on his social networks.
The exhibition “Disproportionateness and Traditions” brings together works related to the celebration of the Bolivian carnival: the encounter, the traditions, the humor and the unrestricted Cell Phone Number List nature that makes the party. Between rituals, parties and dances, the strength and devotion of this festivity will be observed,” according to the press report from the Center of the Cultural Revolution. The Taypi Utasa artist collective is formed by Nelson Guido Saico Alarcón, Julisa Mamani Mitta and Matías Ramos Rivera. The exhibition will have the special participation of the creators Gabriel Emyl Gonzales, Germana Montalvo and Milton Siñani Nina. The name of the collective refers to a meeting point. In the Aymara language, utasa means our house and taypi, the center of the earth, “a meeting point where negative and positive forces can coexist,” according to its members.
We wanted to take this meaning from the encounter we had between people with different ideologies and energies, who came together to learn and discover more about the world they are passionate about,” the artists explained. This is one of the last cultural activities of this year, within the calendar of art shows and exhibitions in the country, already at the closing of the different folklore entrances in Oruro, La Paz, Cochabamba and Santa Cruz; within which the most notable was that of the 'land of Socavón'. President Luis Arce highlighted this Monday that the majestic Oruro Carnival once again captivates the country and the world with its splendor and expressed his pride in “our traditions and customs.” “We show the immense cultural wealth of our majestic Oruro Carnival, which has once again captivated the country and the entire world with its splendor,” the head of state wrote on his social networks.