Sunday, December 22, 2013

Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas

I had an exciting, as well as, a frightening trip to Ciudad Victoria.

The excitement;  I saw the work of local artists Carlos Sanchez and Carlos Victoria. A wonderful display of Figurative and Abstract paintings. Some created using the Impasto technique, other presented using a smother brush stroke. Here are my favorite ones -



They were taken using a cell phone and I had to avoid glare from the natural light that was coming in from above. Being a short dude, I could not get high enough to avoid the glare, so I had to move off center and to the side.

The Frightening; Law enforcement are comprised of Army Soldiers, Federal, and State Police. There is no local law enforcement. Due to the corruption that exists, local law enforcement was stripped of power and higher levels of government took their place.

Until the last 4-5 years, Ciudad Victoria has was known as a lovely capital city of the state of Tamaulipas, Mexico. While the locals continue on with their daily lives they all have learned to live in this new hostile environment (http://www.hoytamaulipas.net/notas/108433/Mueren-42-personas-a-manos-de-Patrulla-Fronteriza-en-ocho-anios.html). Local news are sanitized, and most of the locals communicate happenings using Facebook.

The locals move about freely during the day, but use caution during the night hours. Most of their children have overnight stays at their friends house to avoid traveling after midnight. Soldiers and federal police patrol the streets and enforce curfews. Soldiers are known to open fire on the bad guys regardless of civilians being present. One example is that of a patrol opening fire on the bad elements at a stop light. Heavy arms fire not only heard, but felt. Two flee the scene only to be chased, dragged back to the vehicle and shot.

My next stop is Monterrey, Mexico.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Artistic Process



I have never really known how to talk about my artistic process, at least not without thinking and writing, reading, and re-reading my statement for weeks at a time. Only to find later that I want to change what I said initially.

Perhaps, that is because I don’t find it too particularly interesting.  I'm not out to create or tell great story or agenda.  While I’m a politically driven artist there’s no statement being made that I’m readily aware of.  In fact, what I do is fairly simple.  I produce photographs.  Using light to drip, scrape, smear, or brush, but that’s all I do.


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

THE INVASIVE, DESPISED, DIFFICULT TO KILL YET HEALTHY MESQUITE

Often I have described it as a “land of plenty where no one needs to be hungry”. The wild game is plentiful. The drought resistant native edible plants are more than plentiful. And of late, I have been writing about the drought resistant medicinal herbs and plants native of the area. Such is the case with the much maligned, unappreciated and seemingly indestructible yet edible and nutritious mesquite.

Fray Vicente de Santa Maria (1755 – 1813) in his Relacion historica de la colonia del Nuevo Santander (annotated by Ernesto de la Torre Villar, Mexico City, 1973) gave an excellent insight into the usage of mesquite by the Native American cultures of the present Mexican state of Tamaulipas and South Texas. He noted the hunter-gatherer Native Americans ate the fruit of the mesquite when ripe. They also ground it to powder form and used it as a form of flour to produce mezquitamal. This was then mixed with water and used as a medicinal tea, tortillas or tamales. Years later Jean Louis Berlandier in his various 1828 – 1834 reports on the U.S. – Mexico Boundary Commission recorded the mesquite forest on the Laredo Road to Bexar and the Presidio del Rio Grande Road from Bexar to present Guerrero, Coahuila (Mexico City, 1854 and faulty English translation by the Texas Historical Association, Austin, 1980). Moreover, Berlandier’s Caza de oso y cibolo (Mexico City 1854) and John Ewers annotated translation of Berlandier’s The Indians of Texas in 1828 (Smithsonian, 1968) are excellent sources for the Native American cultures of South Texas and their lifestyle and dependence and usage of the mesquite.

Today many adult males in South Texas and the Winter Garden area recall eating the fruit of the mesquite in childhood. They correctly note the mesquite pod when ripe is sweet and although some adults today eat the pods at a whim, it is more frequently mixed with hay and fed to cattle. Last week Pearsall businessman Norman P surprised me by revealing his grandmother used to prepare and serve a medicinal mesquite tea. It seems the family gathered the ripe mesquite pods and ground them to powder-flour form. The powder-flour was used to prepare a medicinal tea to drink when a person had a cold, congested chest or flu-like symptoms. Norman also recalls his grandmother during winter having a pot of hot water on the stove with mesquite powder emitting vapors. He does not know what it was meant to do but we surmised it was probably a form of humidifier such as some people in the past used and many still do today when they place a pot of hot water with Vicks on the stove to help people with breathing, sinus or allergy problems. As a sidebar, some people use a large onion to prepare an onion-tea for the same purpose.

Nutritionists today tell us the Mesquite bean can be ground and mixed with wheat flour produces a sweet jelly, wine or nutty-tasting bread, pancakes, muffins cookies and cakes. Meanwhile, the leaves of the mesquite can be boiled and used as eye drops and especially against pink-eye! Of course most people in South Texas and the Winter Garden area use pieces of mesquite wood to add flavor to their outdoor barbecuing. Most important is the discovery that “mesquite is extremely effective in controlling sugar levels” by people with diabetes! This is due to the fact that mesquite is low in carbohydrates and fat, low-glycemic, and high in dietary fiber. The ground mesquite flour can also be used to treat athlete’s feet and fungus infections. Moreover, some use the gum or resin of the mesquite for sores, burns wounds, chapped lips and sunburn. Equally surprising the bark of the mesquite can be used to stop excessive menstrual bleeding, reduced fevers and dissolve kidney stones! The same mesquite gum or resin can also be used as a treatment for coughs, sore throat, mouth sores, painful teeth and gums and to rid a person of lice. The same can also be used to sooth intestinal pain after bouts of diarrhea, dysentery and food poisoning.

By

Richard G. Santos

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

PDNB Gallery May 2011

PDNB-624 copyPDNB-206 copyPDNB-133 copyPDNB-127 copyPDNB-43 copyPDNB-49 copy
PDNB-90 copyPDNB-70 copyPDNB-72 copyPDNB-98 copyPDNB-100 copyPDNB-104 copy
PDNB-110 copyPDNB-896 copyPDNB-888 copyPDNB-887 copyPDNB-880 copyPDNB-200 copy 2
PDNB-11 copyPDNB-26 copyPDNB-35 copyPDNB-136 copyPDNB-1311 copyPDNB-1305 copy

The GEORGE KRAUSE Sfumato Portraits

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Ix Chel - Mayan Goddess of the Moon

Here are a few of the costumes to be used for Ix Chel's photo shoot. The shoot is coming together nicely, and I am super excited. There is still much to coordinate, but I feel it will come together well. What I now see as the biggest challenge will be scheduling the date and time with everyone.

Gracias Ricardo for helping get these costumes together.

 

 

 

Posted via email from Manuel Pecina