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- From: paullpd@aol.com (PaulLPD)
- Newsgroups: alt.books.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Hispanic Art
- Date: 8 Apr 1995 22:10:58 -0400
-
- Here is review of a new book on traditional Hispanic art:
-
- "Charlie Carrillo: Tradition & Soul" by Barbe Awalt (Albuquerque: LPD
- Enterprises, 1995) 128 pages, 293 color, 7 black-and-white photos.
- Softcover, $39.95.
-
- The northern New Mexico Hispanic tradition of devotional art (santos) has
- recently become the new focus of the art community. Both Sotheby's and
- Christie's auction houses in New York report staggering prices for
- historic retablos (flat images on ponderosa pine) and bultos (three
- dimensional carved images carved from cottonwood root). Collectors made
- their annual feeding frenzy appearance at July's Spanish Market in Santa
- Fe.
-
- One of the artists who has led the rediscovery of this art form and who
- always sells out at Spanish Market is Charlie Carrillo of Santa Fe. He
- defies any preconceived notion of what a Hispanic New Mexican artist or
- santero should be. He is a Doctoral candidate at the University of New
- Mexico, a national exhibited artist with a long list of awards and honors,
- and as evidenced by the Resource Guide in the back of "Tradition & Soul",
- a widely published author and lecturer.
-
- "Charlie Carrillo: Tradition & Soul" is the first book to document the
- artistic development and career of a santero, one who carves and paints
- devotional images of saints in the Northern New Mexican tradition. Charlie
- learned by studying the works of masters like Molleno, Aragon, and
- Fresquis who are represented in the collections of museums like the Museum
- of International Folk Art or Taylor Museum. These artists and teachers of
- the 1800s traveled from village to village in New Mexico sharing art for
- churches and home chapels as well as telling stories and news from the
- outside world.
-
- Charlie Carrillo is a modern-day santero who relies on personal contact,
- classes, and media publicity to spread the word of the Hispanic
- traditions. Tradition & Soul clearly shows that Charlie Carrillo did not
- start out creating masterpieces. It is a sixteen-year odyssey of artistic
- discovery that puts on each page multiple images of similar themes to
- compare and contrast. The art work in the book comes from private
- collections, museum vaults, the artist's archives, and from the churches
- of New Mexico. The early pieces are simple and at times garish; it can be
- seen how a personal style takes over and the depth of story, that Charlie
- Carrillo is known for, shines through in later pieces.
-
- What the reader or researcher will enjoy about "Tradition & Soul" is that
- the authors have taken the time to find out the personal stories and what
- Charlie was thinking about many of the pieces in the book. That
- information is with each plate. Another first for this type of publication
- are the Lenten and Christmas stories told by Charlie to the authors. For
- anyone who grew up in a traditional household the stories are similar but
- the local color is very different.
-
- "Charlie Carrillo: Tradition & Soul" is a beautiful book that makes you
- want to meet Charlie so he can tell you the stories personally. Inside the
- front cover is a black and white photo of Charlie carving in his studio,
- the smile tells it all.
-
-