Another face of Mexico / Bill LeVasseur

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: San Miguel de Allende (Mexico)--AuthorPublication details: Santa Fe, NM : Art Guild Press LLC , 2014Description: 139 p. : illus. ; 29 cmISBN:
  • 9780988779129
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 731.75 LEV 
LOC classification:
  • CT788.D524 A4 2010
Summary: Another Face of Mexico explores Mexican indigenous masked ceremonies. It is the museum catalog for Another Face of Mexico Museum in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The museum houses about 500 of the approximately 1,000 masks in LeVasseur's collection. The book features wonderfully detailed color photos of almost 150 of these masks that have all been used in masked dancing ceremonies in various parts of Mexico. Another Face of Mexico perfectly describes this mask collection, giving the reader a virtual tour of the museum. Masking and masked ceremony is indeed "another face of Mexico," an aspect of this country that most people are not aware of. Man's desire to transform, to disguise, to imagine, to act out, to be something or someone that they are not, to hide and pretend, are all compulsions that can be satisfied by masking. The indigenous people of Mexico continue to this day to be "mask masters," incorporating masked ceremony into their social, religious and cultural celebrations in spite of creeping modernity and contemporary influences. Mask use in Mexico has survived for centuries and masks continue to be indigenous cultural icons.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Libro - Monografía Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. Sala Ingles 731.75 LEV (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 067036

Located in the Gloria Grant room - special collection of San Miguel authors.

Another Face of Mexico explores Mexican indigenous masked ceremonies. It is the museum catalog for Another Face of Mexico Museum in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The museum houses about 500 of the approximately 1,000 masks in LeVasseur's collection. The book features wonderfully detailed color photos of almost 150 of these masks that have all been used in masked dancing ceremonies in various parts of Mexico. Another Face of Mexico perfectly describes this mask collection, giving the reader a virtual tour of the museum. Masking and masked ceremony is indeed "another face of Mexico," an aspect of this country that most people are not aware of. Man's desire to transform, to disguise, to imagine, to act out, to be something or someone that they are not, to hide and pretend, are all compulsions that can be satisfied by masking. The indigenous people of Mexico continue to this day to be "mask masters," incorporating masked ceremony into their social, religious and cultural celebrations in spite of creeping modernity and contemporary influences. Mask use in Mexico has survived for centuries and masks continue to be indigenous cultural icons.

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