JSMA will hold its annual Día de los Muertos celebrations

This year’s Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, celebration returns to the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art on Thursday and Friday, Nov. 1-2 from 6 to 9 p.m. each evening.

The free celebrations are open to the community and feature dancing, poetry readings, live music, traditional Mexican ofrendas, ceramics, prints and paintings by artists in Mexico, and art activities for all ages.

Each evening, P’urhembe, a group of six musicians and singers who play traditional indigenous and mestizo music from the state of Michoacán, Mexico, will perform with dancers from Identidad y Folclor, based in Guanajuato, Mexico, for a lively cultural event.

Fifteen prints and paintings by artists based in Guanajuato, will be on view. Their imagery is inspired by the Día de los Muertos tradition and two master paintings on view at the museum: Diego Rivera’s “La ofrenda,” or “The Offering”; and Rufino Tamayo’s “Perro aullando a la luna,” or Dog Howling at the Moon.

These paintings are on loan to the museum for one year and are from the collection of Art Bridges, a recently established nonprofit foundation dedicated to providing institutions across the U.S. access to outstanding works of American art.

Rivera’s “La ofrenda” presents Mexico’s annual Día de los Muertos celebration of life and death and Tamayo’s “Perro aullando a la luna” is an expression of necessity and despair, anguish and rage. Both works, exhibited publicly in the United States during the first half of the 20th century, bridge the powerfully enduring presence of Mexico’s ancient beliefs and art with the universal human condition.

Also on display are hand-built ceramics inspired by pre-Hispanic cultural traditions and created by Ernesto Guevara, from Guanajuato, Mexico. Guevara will lead a family-friendly sculptural art activity in the museum’s studio. 

In addition to the evening events, the museum’s galleries will be open from 6-8 p.m. so visitors can see the masterworks by Rivera and Tamayo and many more exhibits.

Constructed by the students of Oak Hills School and MEChA de UO, traditional Día de los Muertos ofrendas, also known as Day of the Dead altars, will be on display. The altar is a customary part of the holiday that is meant to honor and receive the souls of the departed.

“Día de los Muertos is a festive and thoughtful holiday in Mexico and some parts of Central and South America,” said Cheryl Hartup, the museum’s associate curator of Latin American art. “The unique tradition is celebrated by LatinX and ChicanX in the United States, and an ever-increasing general public.”

Thousands of years ago, in the valley of southern Mexico, Mayas, Zapotecas, Mixtecas, and Aztecas honored their dead with elaborate ceremonies, dances and rituals. After Cortez conquered Mexico in the 16th century and with the introduction of Catholicism, the religious celebrations of All Saints Day and All Souls Day coincided with the indigenous Mexican celebrations.

The intersection of these celebrations has given way to the Día de los Muertos known today, which includes the tradition of altars with food, a glass of water, candles, flowers, papel picado paper cut-outs and photographs of the deceased alongside those of saints.

In Mexico, the celebration varies between regions. However, Día de los Muertos Chiquitos is traditionally observed Nov. 1 to honor departed children. This evening is also sometimes referred to as la Noche de Duelo, or The Night of Mourning, and is marked by a candlelight procession to the cemetery. On Nov. 2, Día de los Muertos, the spirits of the dead are remembered and families gather to visit the graves of their ancestors.

The day is passed cleaning and decorating the gravesites of the departed, and time is spent together as a family and as a community. Families bring the favorite foods and libations of their loved ones to the gravesites, along with a picnic lunch for themselves.

Sugar skulls and toys are given to the children, which emphasize early on that death is an important part in the cycle of life. This is a happy celebration for families to remember the pleasant times shared with departed family members.

The Día de los Muertos celebration at the museum is co-sponsored by Oak Hill School in conjunction with the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, MEChA de UO, Adelante Sí, UO Latinx Strategy Group, Instituto Estatal de la Cultura de Guanajuato and Instituto Estatal de Atención al Migrante Guanajuatense y sus familias.