WILLIAMSTOWN — When José Guadalupe Posada created his most iconic work, a dapper skeleton decked out in a floppy, wide-brimmed hat festooned with feathers, she was not known as "La Calavera Catrina," ...
SAN ANTONIO – Calaveras are the decorative skulls you see everywhere during Day of the Dead, and the most popular ones we see today were inspired by a Mexican printmaker named Jose Guadalupe Posada.
José Guadalupe Posada was a Mexican artist who was born in 1852. How much does a José Guadalupe Posada cost? José Guadalupe Posada's work has been offered at auction multiple times, with realized ...
Since his death a century ago, José Guadalupe Posada's work has steadily gained popularity with art lovers and Dia de los Muertos celebrators alike. He is especially known for his calaveras images of ...
Little wonder that calaveras, or skeletons, are at the bone-deep base of Mexican printmaker José Guadalupe Posada's legacy. When one peels away the toys, brands, flesh - even those Day of the Dead ...
You know those Mexican Day of the Dead skeletons? Well, there’s one artist that popularized them and his work is on display at the Hyde Collection in Glens Falls this summer. Monica SandreczkiGlens ...
The Flood Gallery Fine Arts Center is pleased to announce it’s opening of limited edition Posada prints titled, “Posada: Marigolds & Skulls made possible by a grant from the North Carolina Humanities ...
Skeleton dancers, a skeleton cigar smoker, a skeleton guitarist and even a skeleton Eiffel Tower! The gleefully bone-jangling figures in the work of Mexican artist José Guadalupe Posada (1852-1913) ...
Dia de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is a Mexican holiday to honor loved ones who have passed into the afterlife. A reigning symbol of Dia de los Muertos is the calavera, which personifies death as ...
When you walk into the Fullerton Museum Center’s current exhibit, José Guadalupe Posada’s iconic “La Calavera Catrina” greets you with her toothy smile. The calavera, or skull, is wearing a ...
Skeletons poured from the closet of Jose Guadalupe Posada’s imagination. Cigar-chomping skeleton oligarchs and bloodied skeleton soldiers. Skeleton street sweepers and bowler-hatted businessmen, ...
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