Monday, August 12, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN PHOTOS OF HOLY FAMILY CHURCH, FORT COLLINS, COLORADO

The Holy Family concrete statue
Juan Diego concrete statue holding the cloak of the Virgin of Guadalupe

Closeup of the handpainted Virgin of Guadalupe

Back side of the Juan Diego concrete statue

The Holy Family Church with nicho containing statue of the Holy Family

The concrete statue of the Holy Family stands at the left of the church.

This week I discovered two sweet concrete statues outside The Holy Family Catholic Church of Fort Collins, Colorado. One is the Holy Family, Mary, Joseph, and the boy Jesus. The other is the infamous Juan Diego, holding his cloak with the miraculous image of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Sadly, the statue of the Guadalupe is now missing from the landscape, and the fountain was not running. (See the photo below from the church website for reference.)  I planned to photograph inside the church, but it was locked. I will have to visit one morning after Mass, and ask what happened to the Guadalupe.


Photo of The Holy Family Catholic Church

Built in 1924, this historic Old Town church began serving Spanish-speaking Catholic sugarbeet workers at the Great Western Sugar plant. Their community, known as "Alta Vista" and "Spanish Colony," was founded in 1927. There is now the Museo de las Trés Colonias, dedicated to the history of these Hispanic communities. I will make a foray there the next time it is open. Fort Collins History Connection

Forgotten Fort Collins's website tells the story of Lee Martinez who helped build the church. His family came from Southern Colorado's Huerfano County in 1906. I am enjoying reading about his prominent role in the early days of Fort Collins history.

So...much more photography to come in my exploration of the Spanish-Catholic influences on this frontier town of Fort Collins.

Please stop by and visit Rebecca Brooks' Mornings with Mary, as I have linked my post to her sharing.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN PHOTOGRAPHS THE VIRGIN OF GUADALUPE ALTARS IN MEXICO

A cemetery Guadalupe in Oaxaca's San Miguel Panteon

Laurie Beth Zuckerman invites you to accompany artist and host, Rebecca Brooks to a world of colorful altars and cemetery nichos in the land of San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. This adventure to Colonial Mexico is scheduled for December 10-19, 2013. Rebecca has invited me to teach a two-day Memory Nicho Workshop, an option for all who join Rebecca's Loving Lupita folk art tour, highlighting this ancient December 12 festival of La Virgen de Guadalupe.

By sharing my photos of altars dedicated to La Virgen de Guadalupe, the archetypal saint of Mexico, I hope to inspire you to join Rebecca, and myself on this unique adventure.

PLEASE visit Rebecca Brooks blog for Sunday's "Postcards from Paradise"for a taste of what she imagines for her December tour of San Miguel de Allende.

La Virgen of Guadalupe prays in a nicho shrine in
La Luz Panteon, San Miguel de Allende

A special altar to La Virgen de Guadalupe stands
at the entrance to the El Panteon municipal cemetery in Oaxaca,
decorated for the Guadalupe festival

This Guadalupe altar in the Templo San Felipé Neri,
in old Oaxaca city, is simply dressed for her season


Monday, August 5, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN PHOTOGRAPHS NEW MEXICAN GUADALUPE ARTWORK IN SANTA FE

The Virgin of Guadalupe, Sanctuario de Chimayo, New Mexico

The Virgin of Guadalupe, Sanctuario de Chimayo side chapel, New Mexico


Stained Glass window in El Sanctuario de Guadalupe Church, Santa Fe, New Mexico

El Sanctuario de Guadalupe Church, Santa Fe, New Mexico

This morning I am linking up with Rebecca Brooks' Mornings with Mary at her recuerda mi corazon website. I am sharing images of several Virgen de Guadalupe images that I photographed at two of the most popular shrines in Northern New Mexico. The first is El Sanctuario de Chimayo, built in 1813, and located north of Santa Fe along the High Road to Taos. The second site is El Sanctuario de Guadalupe Church, built in 1781, and located in the historic Guadalupe district of Santa Fe.

If Our Lady of Guadalupe is your passion, you may consider traveling to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico with Rebecca, and me, on her Loving Lupita journey, December 10-19, 2013.

Saturday, August 3, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN TEACHES MEMORY NICHO ALTAR WORKSHOP IN SAN MIGUEL DE ALLENDE, MEXICO WITH REBECCA BROOKS

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La Virgen de Guadalupe altar,
photo taken in San Miguel de Allende by Rebecca Brooks.

Celebrate the December 12, 1531, miracle of La Virgen de Guadalupe in historic San Miguel de Allende this December 10-19, 2013.  Discover what Our Lady of Guadalupe, the most beloved symbol of Mexico, represents for your personal life, with artist host, Rebecca Brooks on her LOVING LUPITA magical tour of Guadalupe festivals, Christmas posadas, processions, folk artisans, and colonial churches.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman will lead an optional two-day Memory Nicho workshop that will enhance your exploration of La Lupita, and dovetail perfectly with Rebecca's exciting excursions.

Laurie will guide you in creating a wooden shadowbox shrine (in Spanish: nicho) to contain all the symbols that have touched your soul in Mexico, and express your adoration of La Lupita. As the focal figure of your nicho, you will make a reverse-glass painting of the Guadalupe, employing the Medieval style used for painting sacred icons. Laurie will provide all the templates you will need to create your version of a traditional or contemporary image of La Lupita.

Inspired by Laurie's traditional memory jug techniques in her popular MEMORY JUGS BOOK, you will embellish your wooden altar with found-object adornments scavenged in the marketplaces of San Miguel, and from your personal treasure trove at home. Using paints and gilding, the entire surface of your nicho will develop a richly-textured patina, to mimic the antique gilded altars we will visit in San Miguel's famed colonial churches.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman created this nicho shrine
in honor of her mother, using a vintage Mexican shadowbox.
Photo by Laurie Zuckerman

Vintage foil and reverse glass-painting of La Virgen de Guadalupe,
on display in a Oaxacan restaurant. Photo by Laurie Zuckerman

I found this vintage Mexican reverse glass and foil painting 
of the Guadalupe in an antique store in Colorado years ago.
Photo by Laurie Zuckerman 

AND, just to wet your appetite for all things Guadalupe and Mexican, here are just a few of Laurie's photos of the Guadalupe church festival altars in Oaxaca, Mexico.


La Virgen de Guadalupe altar festival under construction by two altaristas
at the Nuestra Señora de las Nieves church in Oaxaca, Mexico.
Photo by Laurie Zuckerman

La Virgen de Guadalupe altar at the Nuestra Señora de las Nieves
church in Oaxaca, Mexico. Photo by Laurie Zuckerman

La Virgen de Guadalupe altar festival in the Basilica church,
 Oaxaca, Mexico. Photo by Laurie Zuckerman

La Virgen de Guadalupe altar festival in Teotitlan del Valle church,
Oaxaca, Mexico. Photo by Laurie Zuckerman

For much more information about this tour and to secure reservations, please contact Rebecca Brooks at her website: http://www.corazon.typepad.com or email her at: recuerda_mi_corazon@yahoo.com

For more information about this workshop, please comment on this post or contact Laurie Beth Zuckerman at this site. lauriebethzuckerman@gmail.com

Read more about the history of Our Lady of Guadalupe.


Sunday, July 28, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN TEACHES MEMORY JUGS WORKSHOP IN BOULDER, COLORADO, AUGUST 24-25 at Susan Wechsler's Studio

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's personal memory jug entitled, "Mother of Pearl"
 dedicated to her mother, Blanche Kleid Zuckerman, 1922-2001.

Please click on the flier above to read about Laurie Beth Zuckerman's
August 24-25 Memory Jugs Weekend Workshop in Boulder, Colorado.

TWO SPACES REMAIN in Laurie Beth Zuckerman's weekend Memory Jug Workshop, August 24-25. Click on the flier above to read more about this special workshop in Boulder, Colorado.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman will teach a third session of her two-day Memory Jugs weekend workshop, as the special guest artist of Susan Wechsler Mosaics on August 24-25, 2013. This is a special opportunity to work with two internationally recognized found-object assemblage artists in a private workshop limited to ten participants at Susan's mosaics studio in Boulder, Colorado. I am looking to fill the last two spaces, as I have students arriving from California, Texas, Virginia, and Ohio. 

I will guide each participant in creating their own personal MEMORY JUG, inspired by this enigmatic Victorian-era, American folk art form of memorial art. Susan Wechsler, renowned for her mosaic shrines and memory dresses, will be my assistant throughout this workshop. You will receive one-on- one, hands-on advice from each of us throughout the weekend.

My last workshop in June, hosted by Susan Wechsler, was completely full with artists from around the country. Everyone worked so diligently and their memory jugs were fascinating works of art. I will continue posting photos to this blog post as everyone finishes their unique creations.

During my last Memory Jug Workshop in Boulder, June 8-9, 2013, these three participating artists created their unique interpretations of this American folk craft. There is amazing diversity in this "mosaic-like" medium.

This beautiful memory jug was made by Emily Henderson of Denver.

This elegant jug was created by Peg Harper of Longmont.
Peg added lots of objects she had molded with polymer clay.
A work-in-progress photo showing Peg Harper's memory jug
during my last two-day workshop in June. Compare this before
image with the one above of Peg's finished jug.

This bold and whimsical memory jug was made by Cindy Shepard of Hurst, Texas,
who also included handmade pieces of her own, as well as a host of found objects.


For workshop details and to make your reservations, contact Laurie Beth Zuckerman at 970-482-5589 or lauriebethzuckerman@gmail.com

And if you can't make my next workshop, you may want to check out my 254-page Memory Jugs Book on CD in the meantime. You can order this CD for $20 from this website:

http://lauriezuckerman.blogspot.com/2013/02/laurie-beth-zuckermans-memory-jugs-book.html

Sunday, March 24, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN'S EL PANTEON CEMETERY CRYPT FROM GUANAJUATO, MEXICO

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's photo of cemetery crypt, Guanajuato, Mexico

Due to Winter Storm Virgil, I have spent much of my Spring Break holed up at my computer working on photos from my trips to Colonial Mexico during the Day of the Dead, the Christmas Posadas, and other times of the year. I am busy preparing images for the upcoming Día de los Muertos Exhibition at the Longmont Museum and Cultural Center. This will be the third year I am participating in this show full of altars, folk art, and photography. I have had huge altars and enlarged photographs displayed the past two years. This year I am hoping to incorporate both into one large installation. I have been invited to be on the planning committee for this year's exhibition, and the meetings are still to come. I will let you know more as the ideas develop.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman El Panteon Cemetery Crypt, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
Laurie Beth Zuckerman's photo of cemetery niche, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico

Monday, February 25, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN'S MEMORY JUG WORKSHOP IN BOULDER, CO: JUNE 8-9, 2013 at Susan Wechsler's Studio

Please click on the flyer above to read about Laurie Beth Zuckerman's
June 8-9 Memory Jugs Weekend Workshop in Boulder, Colorado.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "Tarnished Angels" Memory Jug Reliquary, 2012,
honors my mother and father.
Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "Tarnished Angels" Memory Jug Reliquary showing all four sides

Laurie Beth Zuckerman will lead a second two-day weekend workshop at the mosaic studio of Susan Wechsler in Boulder, Colorado, June 8-9, 2013. This is a special opportunity to work with two internationally-recognized found-object assemblage artists. I will guide each participant in creating their own personal MEMORY JUG RELIQUARY, inspired by this enigmatic Victorian-era American folk art of Memory Jugs and Memoryware. 

Susan Wechsler will assist me in this memory jug workshop. She was an awesome student in my last workshop that I held at her studio on February 16-17. What a great group and so talented. We all agreed it was a wonderful experience. Everyone worked so diligently and their memory jugs were fascinating with all the detail in their collections of memorabilia.

Pictured below is one of Susan's Memory Dresses. I am enthralled by the textures and colors we were able to create in her dress. Her 20-year background in art and mosaics made this challenging process proceed smoothly throughout the weekend. Susan is a natural.

Susan Wechsler transformed her Memory Dress form
using several of Laurie's memory jug techniques for the first time.


Pictured below are additional photos I snapped during the workshop. I love how they capture the deep state of concentration each of these participants experienced during the class. Each of the four students explored a unique approach and theme to their Memory Jug. I will post finished pictures of the finished jugs when I receive them all. 

February's Memory Jug Workshop at Susan Wechsler's Studio.
From left: Krystie Rose Millich, Dawn Putney, and Diana Muniz. 

Diana Muniz flew in from Houston, Texas to create
her Memory Jug honoring the passages of her life.

Dawn Putney from Fort Collins, Colorado utilizes
the workshop to create a memorial to her grandmother.


For workshop details and reservations, read the above flyer, or contact: 
lauriebethzuckerman@gmail.com or call Laurie at 970-482-5589

For workshop reservations: 
susan.wechsler@gmail.com or call Susan at 303-485-0636

Sunday, January 6, 2013

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN MEMORY JUGS AT LINCOLN CENTER'S VISIONS AND VIEWPOINTS NATIONAL JURIED ART COMPETITION 2012-13

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "My Three Mothers" Memory Jug 2013

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "My Three Mothers" Memory Jug 2013

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "My Three Mothers" Memory Jug 2013

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "Skating on Thin Ice" Memory Jug 2013 displayed
in the lobby of the Lincoln Center. My husband is in the background.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "Skating on Thin Ice" Memory Jug 2013

Visions and Viewpoints National Juried Competition at the Lincoln Center Gallery.
My memory jug is on the pedestal in the middle of this view.

The Lincoln Center Gallery in Fort Collins hosted a national competition of fine art and I was lucky to have two of my found-object memory jugs selected for this exhibition by Guest Jurors Louis Recchia and Zoa Ace. Competitions are always hit-or-miss, but this time I studied the jurors' artwork on their websites, and entered pieces that were both colorful and whimsical, based on their visual leanings. 

This is my first time exhibiting in this newly remodeled gallery, my favorite venue in Fort Collins. 
The show, which opened last year on November 30, finished up yesterday, January 5, 2013 and I ran down with my tripod and camera to grab these installation views. So many reflections and lights make for a sparkling show but lend some difficult photography conditions. 


Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "My Three Mothers" Memory Jug Closeup

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's "Skating on Thin Ice" Memory Jug Closeup

Below is the preview article from the Loveland, Colorado Reporter Herald about the exhibition.



Here is the link to the Lincoln Center Gallery to view its past and current exhibitions.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

THOMAS MATHIES' CARVINGS OF CRUCIFIXES AND SKULLS (LAURIE ZUCKERMAN'S HUSBAND)

Thomas Mathies' carving of Jesus Christ on the cross is hand-hewn from
cottonwood roots he found along the Poudre River outside of Fort Collins.
Traditional egg tempera and gesso, typical of colonial New Mexican
religious folk art, were used for painting and antiquing the forms.

Thomas Mathies' cross carving with skulls is handmade from cottonwood roots.
Below is an authentic wood carving of San Jose (Saint Joseph) by the
famous 19th century New Mexican woodcarver, José Benito Ortega.

Closeup of Thomas Mathies' wooden cross with skulls 

Closeup of Thomas Mathies' wooden skulls 

I am so lucky to have a husband who is an amazing artist. Tom Mathies has been creating several amazing carvings this past year from found cottonwood in the style of Colonial New Mexican religious folk art. These are my birthday and Christmas presents!!!

Tom is professional a research animal biologist, but he has always had an artistic side. On the other hand, I have always been an artist with a biologist bent. We met on a nature adventure to Costa Rica in 1985 and just celebrated our 23rd wedding anniversary. While on our honeymoon to the Southwest, I bought the San Jose carving at an American Indian jewelry shop in Moab, thinking it had been made in Mexico. Shortly afterwards we discovered that our San Jose was made in the late 1900s by a famous New Mexican santero, José Benito Ortega. 

We have spent our entire married life researching the works of Ortega and other colonial santeros showcased in museums around New Mexico and Colorado. We own a stack of books on the topic, and have collections numerous crucifixes from Mexico and the Phillipines. Tom's carvings fit perfectly into our religious folk art obsession.

Here is a photo of Tom's creation for my birthday last year. This cross is based on the Colonial New Mexican tradition of straw appliqué, still practiced today. Read more about Tom's cross at my earlier post from 2011.


Thomas Mathies' straw appliqué wooden cross 2011