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Handcrafted Frida Kahlo Huichol Earrings in Beadwork 'Immortal Frida' Item ID: 2677075328
$137.99This is your own listing item.
"Images of Frida Kahlo come to life in tiny, colorful seed beads. Artisans from the Huichol Center for Cultural Survival and Traditional Arts craft these novel three-inch long earrings, meticulously placing tiny seed beads one by one. Immortalized in film, Kahlo and her husband, muralist Diego Rivera, were leaders in Mexico's artistic and intellectual world during the first half of the 20th century."
- 0.25 oz
- 3.3 inches L x 1.3 inches W x 0.2 inches D
- Glass beads
- 925 sterling silver hooks
- Hand-crafted item -- color
- size and/or motif may vary slightly
- High polish finish
- Hook earrings
Made in Mexico
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The Huichol arrived in the area of Barranca de Bolanos after the Tepecanos or Tepehuanes arrived. Tepehuana oral history affirms that some populations currently inhabited by Wixarika, such as Santa Catarina, were inhabited by Tepehuanas in the past.
The Huichol people are one of the oldest indigenous communities in Mexico. Its population can currently be estimated at around 44,000 people, who live mainly in the center-west of the country, in some areas of the Sierra Madre Occidental (Sierra Huichola) between the states of Jalisco, Nayarit and Durango.
In Spanish, they are known as Huichol, a word possibly derived from the term with which they were named in the Nahuatl language spoken by the Aztecs. But in their own language - which they keep alive like a treasure - they call themselves Wixarika (pronounced virarica). The Huichol, or Wixarika people are widely recognized for having preserved their spiritual identity and for continuing to practice their cultural and religious traditions for thousands of years.
Our goal is to preserve the beautiful traditions of the Huichol people through crafts, spiritual practices, training for families, medical assistance and indigenous education.
Among their spiritual traditions is the ritual collection and consumption of peyote, a hallucinogenic cactus in the place they call Wirikuta, located in the Real de Catorce region, in the state of San Luis Potosi. Peyote does not grow in the Wixaritari region, but it is abundant in San Luis Potosi, a territory that was the central domain of the Guachichiles before the arrival of the Spanish. The Guachichiles were recognized as an ethnic group fiercely defensive of their territory.
Among our projects to promote cultural activities is Creative Hands, which promotes economic self-sufficiency by training Wixarika artists in traditional and contemporary arts. The main mission of the Huichol Cultural Center is to create lasting bridges to the future, by preserving a pioneering tradition of our country.
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Huichol Center for Cultural Survival and Tradition
@huichol-center-for-cultural-survival-and-tradition-196Exceptional Craftsmanship, Made by Hand
Huichol Center for Cultural Survival and Tradition
The Huichol arrived in the area of Barranca de Bolanos after the Tepecanos or Tepehuanes arrived. Tepehuana oral history affirms that some populations currently inhabited by Wixarika, such as Santa Catarina, were inhabited by Tepehuanas in the past.
The Huichol people are one of the oldest indigenous communities in Mexico. Its population can currently be estimated at around 44,000 people, who live mainly in the center-west of the country, in some areas of the Sierra Madre Occidental (Sierra Huichola) between the states of Jalisco, Nayarit and Durango.
In Spanish, they are known as Huichol, a word possibly derived from the term with which they were named in the Nahuatl language spoken by the Aztecs. But in their own language - which they keep alive like a treasure - they call themselves Wixarika (pronounced virarica). The Huichol, or Wixarika people are widely recognized for having preserved their spiritual identity and for continuing to practice their cultural and religious traditions for thousands of years.
Our goal is to preserve the beautiful traditions of the Huichol people through crafts, spiritual practices, training for families, medical assistance and indigenous education.
Among their spiritual traditions is the ritual collection and consumption of peyote, a hallucinogenic cactus in the place they call Wirikuta, located in the Real de Catorce region, in the state of San Luis Potosi. Peyote does not grow in the Wixaritari region, but it is abundant in San Luis Potosi, a territory that was the central domain of the Guachichiles before the arrival of the Spanish. The Guachichiles were recognized as an ethnic group fiercely defensive of their territory.
Among our projects to promote cultural activities is Creative Hands, which promotes economic self-sufficiency by training Wixarika artists in traditional and contemporary arts. The main mission of the Huichol Cultural Center is to create lasting bridges to the future, by preserving a pioneering tradition of our country.
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