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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkVallarta Living | Art Talk | January 2009 

Sol y Luna Welcomes Artist Lena Bartula
email this pageprint this pageemail usMike Sole - PVNN

Last Saturday night, a crowd gathered at JapaNice for a cocktail reception hosted by Sol y Luna Contemporary Art Gallery owner Alejandro Baez to welcome artist Lena Bartula.
Puerto Vallarta is so fortunate to have such a large and extensive art community. Saturday night we had the privilege of attending Lena Bartula's opening reception at JapaNice, 696 Morelos, hosted by Alejandro Baez, owner of Sol y Luna Contemporary Art Gallery. The opening reception was just the first of the events for us to enjoy.

Lena Bartula will offer a talk about her newest artwork created for her One Woman Show, "Enigmas" on Monday, January 26 at 7:30 pm at Los Mangos Library, Av. Francisco Villa #1001.

Enigmas opens for a two-week run at Sol y Luna on Wednesday, January 28th from 6 to 10 pm with a wine reception and hors d'oeuvres from Caio Restaurant and artist Lena Bartula presenting 24 of her newest and most spectacular paintings.

The image of a Huipil (wee-peel) takes center stage in an upcoming exhibition at Sol y Luna Contemporary Gallery in Old Town Puerto Vallarta. Opening with a wine reception on January 28, the show has been named "Enigmas" by the talented artist, Lena Bartula.

Lena explains what hupils are to her: "Huipil is a Maya woman's traditional blouse; it is her identity, a marker of her village, her status, her background and beliefs. The weaving of this garment is both a sacred duty and a personal statement, woven with her own designs, colors and ideas, yet all within the context of her tradition."

Bartula is sure that never in this lifetime will she understand all the codes whispered within their threads. They are beautiful, mysterious and holy. It is said the goddesses reveal the weaving process in dreams. They are enigmatic in that the symbology originally woven into them, as related to religion, agriculture or astronomy, had to be hidden.

With the Spanish conquest, as with all conquests, a 'cover up' had to be devised so that the traditions would not get lost. This exhibition, "Enigmas," aims to shine a light on the significance of these magical garments, as well as the women who weave them.

The huipil shape is reverberated throughout the exhibition, with or without the ubiquitous details one would normally see on this clothing. Symbols for rain, serpent, corn, or cosmic signs such as sun, moon, eclipse, show up enigmatically; some paintings include not the shape itself, but rather a design or a detail that prompted me to examine another part of the history of these textiles.

The heart of the contemporary Maya still beats to the rhythm of the seasons, planting and harvesting of corn is still sacred, as one painting, "Secretos del Maiz" suggests. In "Sing With Praise" we see the toad and the saints, both instrumental in bringing the rain needed for the crops.

The neck opening of a huipil is thought to represent the center of the world into which the wearer places herself, as seen in "Axis Mundi." "Eclipse" tells of the goddesses who come in dreams, but who since the conquest are known as Santa Lucia, Maria Magdalena, or other saints.

As in a celestial eclipse, the light of these beings was simply covered over for a time. Other works, "Whitewash" and "Weft/Warped," also employ the power of words in the titles, to covertly discuss the politics of conquest. With the words Text and Textile entomologically linked, such wordplay seems perfectly appropriate for a text and image artist like herself.

Sol y Luna Contemporary Gallery is located at Josefa Ortiz de Domínguez 155-A, in downtown Puerto Vallarta. For more information please visit SolyLunaPV.com, call (322) 222-1302 or email solylunapv(at)yahoo.com.



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