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  1. Dec 14, 2023 · The uniquely Mexican calaveras are also based in the Mexican Indigenous tradition and belief system that death is a companion ever-present in a person’s life. Life is but a borrowed moment in time, for we all start our journey to the end of life from the moment we are born.

  2. Oct 25, 2018 · Santa Muerte is a Mexican folk saint who personifies death in the form a female skeleton. Whether as a votive candle, gold medallion, or statue, she is typically depicted as a Grim Reapress, wielding the same scythe and wearing a shroud similar to that of the Grim Reaper, her male forebear.

  3. Day of the Dead celebration in Los Angeles, California. Photo courtesy of Andrew Rollinger, CC via Flickr. Today, the figure of Catrina, also sometimes called “La Muerte,” appears in sculpture, drawing, painting, and mixed media.

  4. DÍA DE LOS MUERTOS. In Mexico, death rites date from pre-Hispanic rituals represented in murals, painted pottery, monuments, and artifacts, which shows how the Day of the Dead has its origins in the rituals practiced by the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

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  6. Nov 8, 2023 · Skulls, skeletons, andcalaveras (skeleton figures) are an iconic part of Mexico‘s Día de Muertos (Day of the Dead). But what is the deeper cultural meaning behind these macabre motifs? As someone enamored by Mexican culture, I‘ve researched the complex history and symbolism embedded in these boney images.

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  7. In Mexico, long after his death, “cultural authorities” began to recover Posada’s drawings (rius, 84). Posada’s only comic “person” was given new life; “Chepito Marihuano” re-appeared in various scenes (rius, 87), along with his drawings of boxers and bulls, which remained popular still.

  8. Oct 29, 2023 · Today, during Día de los Muertos, that same central plaza is filled with hundreds of La Catrina impersonators who, for a few dollars, will pose for photographs with tourists all too willing to ...

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