On the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the sculptural group of the Conversion of the Samaritan Woman, the California Brotherhood has opened on Thursday, March 5 at the Molina Palace an exhibition that revolves around the traditional figure of the Samaritan woman in her processions, and that may Visited until March 22.
The exhibition was inaugurated by the mayor of Cartagena, Ana Belén Castejón, and by the older brother of California, Juan Carlos de la Cerra.
The event was also attended by the Deputy Mayor, Manuel Padín and the special Councilor for Culture, Carlos Piñana.
The exhibition presents a varied and abundant heritage, with costumes, fixtures and jewelry, and begins with an explanatory panel of the origins in Cartagena's Easter Week, coinciding with the founding of the brotherhood itself in the eighteenth century.
It is completed with tunics, galas and the shrouds of the children's thirds of San Pedro, which since 1964 accompany the Samaritan Palm Sunday.
Also with a varied set of documents of diverse origin.
You can also enjoy an audiovisual viewing that the Agrupación de San Pedro projects in the room made by José María Montoya and Francisco Escudero de Castro.
Source: Ayuntamiento de Cartagena