The thread is the core sample Sonia Navarro, while social inequalities in the Peruvian city of Ayacucho hoard Baldomero Alejos exposure.
Both will be open to the public until August 31 at the Cultural Center Ramón Alonso Luzzy
Two new exhibitions add to the programming of The Sea of Art, Pulling Sonia Navarro thread, and the calm before the storm, Baldomero Alejos.
Both samples were presented this morning at the Cultural Center Luzzy Ramon Alonso, by the Councillor for Culture, Maria del Rosario Monter or that has accompanied the authors of the works.
The artist Murcia, Sonia Navarro, is leading Pull the thread, exposure has also been supported by the mayor of Women, Clara Hall. D oce women from five different countries (Peru, Ecuador, Russia, Ghana and Spain) have been part of this workshop that has been done in the previous days, and today has been captured in a colorful mural.
The thread, in the words of the author, is the common denominator of this sample. Planes We have faced a stitch pattern with tours of our daily lives. To achieve that end, and to show it to visitors, this dozen females have used materials from household chores, in the words of the artist. Pins, needles, or wool up the range of tools with which have demonstrated the validity of the old means of production in contemporary creation.
Peru is the guest on this edition of The Sea Music, and therefore, in pursuance thereof, in collaboration with Entrepreneurs Without Borders, have had the alpaca wool left by The Handbooks of Peru, about women weavers in rural areas of Puno.
The second of the exhibition, which is in the city of Ayacucho as central, it is located on the ground floor of the Cultural Center Luzzy Ramon Alonso. The calm before the storm, is a set of one hundred photographs taken by the late photographer Baldomero Alejos from 1902-1976.
It is an honor that part of my father's photo archive is in Cartagena, said Walter Alejos. My father worked naturally.
Never used artificial light, many of your images European motifs.
A collation of the latter, Walter has put the day anecdotal recounting how his father forced him to be aware of the correct position of the sun for the photographic material not to spoil.
Alejos exposure is a historical portrait of Ayacucho and social differences of this Peruvian city at a time when years later the Peruvian armed conflict explode with the arrival in 1980 of the Shining Path terrorist group.
Both exhibitions will be open to the public until August 31 at the Cultural Center Luzzy Ramon Alonso.
Hours: Monday to Friday from 09.00 to 13.00 and from 17.00 to 20.00.
Source: Ayuntamiento de Cartagena