Demián Flores' paintings reinterpret Zapotec iconography and remains.

Demián Flores' paintings reinterpret Zapotec iconography and remains.
Cocijo, a series of oil paintings and prints, will remain at the Espacio Cultural Gallery until August 15.
▲ Effigy Vase II , oil. 2023. Photo courtesy of the artist .
Merry MacMasters
La Jornada Newspaper, Saturday, August 2, 2025, p. 5
The Espacio Cultural Gallery in Oaxaca City displays the work of painter Demián Flores, which coincided with the opening of the Rufino Tamayo Museum of Pre-Hispanic Art of Mexico in Oaxaca 49 years ago. These works feature 12 lithographs of ancient Mexican idols, alluding to the more than 1,000 archaeological pieces donated by Tamayo.
These lithographs are based on simple drawings of some of the ceramics in the collection, to which Tamayo then applied a colored stain
, Demián notes. Many of the vessels housed in the museum have their own unique character
. To the extent that the original museography, which is still preserved, emulates Tamayo's paintings, the museum's colorful niches absorb the colors that surround them
and, in the process, change the way we look
.
Attracted by Tamayo's graphic work, Flores took up "their inspiration to make a somewhat academic, almost archaeological drawing of the same Zapotec effigy vessels, both from the Oaxacan site and the National Museum of Anthropology. Of these funerary urns, one of the most represented and relevant deities within the Zapotec pantheon is Cocijo, the god of lightning, rain, storms, hail, clouds, fog, and dew
." Flores drew in person at both sites.
Cocijo is the title of the series Flores began more than three years ago; part of it is on display at the Espacio Cultural de Oaxaca. It includes 14 oil paintings in various formats, eight prints, and a ceramic piece. At the end of 2023, the artist exhibited some of these works in his solo exhibition , A flor de piel (A flower of skin) , the latest exhibition held by Galería Casa Lamm.
Flores had previously worked on the figure of Chaac, a Mayan version of Cocijo
, a piece that engaged in dialogue
with a work on the same theme by French artist Orlán, exhibited in 2024 at the Museo de Arte Popular. From there, the Cocijo series originated, which required an almost archaeological work with the drawing of these pieces
, many of whose iconographic attributes have to do with the bat, the earth, the sky, the jaguar, and the serpent. When bringing these images together and creating a kind of palimpsest—not all of them are effigy vessels of Cocijo—Flores realized that the combination of these iconographies created new meanings.
Create new signifiers
At that point, he decided to shift
the series of drawings toward painting. This led him to consider what I was interested in doing in painting as a contemporary artistic practice
. He decided it would involve revisiting painting from its own elements as a meaningful form
. He thus displaced these small linear drawings as a form of pictorial structure, and these lines became a motive for considering painting: how the line could determine pictorial space
.
According to Flores, Cocijo is his most pictorial series, although if you look at the paintings, they're actually lines that construct the visual field
. He was also interested in creating "a kind of antipalimpsest, as if one were dismantling the elements of painting—line, color, space—to arrive at almost essential forms."
Part of the series is also on display in Mexico City, as the graphic pieces were created at the La Imagen del Rinoceronte Workshop in downtown Tlalpan.
Led by printmaker Humberto Valdez, the workshop is open free of charge to young people who work there and learn graphic design. Between 50 and 60 young people attend each day, notes Flores, who created a portfolio of six prints there, the edition of which he donated so the funds raised could support the purchase of materials.
The Cocijo exhibition will remain open until August 15 at the Espacio Cultural de Oaxaca, Crespo 114, Oaxaca City.
From the Editorial Staff
La Jornada Newspaper, Saturday, August 2, 2025, p. 5
Baja California is the guest of honor at the Los Pinos Cultural Center at a celebration taking place today and tomorrow, where the border state will showcase music, dance, storytelling, literature, gastronomy, and a craft exhibition—expressions of the sea, mountains, and desert of the northern part of the country.
The Yuman, made up of five indigenous groups on the Mexican side, will be represented in the flavors of smoked kitchens, as well as in a display of handicrafts, activities that will begin at 10:00 a.m. At the same time, the photography exhibition Jaspuypaim: The Never Baptized will open to the public, capturing the life and death of the mountain Indians.
These indigenous groups have been present for some 4,500 years, making them the only group of prehistoric origin that established contact with European colonizers and that survives to the present. They live in settlements in the municipalities of Ensenada, Tecate, Rosarito, and Mexicali.
Today and tomorrow, Lizeth Marcela will offer representative oral storytelling from Baja California, in addition to leading workshops for children.
Dancer Alejandro Chávez will perform contemporary dance performances with choreography Manuel , while Jesús Bautista will perform the rock-pop concert Me verás subir.
Between 1 and 3 p.m., the Nortestación station will arrive, where books by Baja California writers will be given away. Minerva Velasco will also perform a dramatized reading of Frida Kahlo: Viva la Vida .
On Sunday, at 3:20 p.m., the National School of Folkloric Dance Company will perform the calabaceado dance, which has its roots in livestock farming activities in the north. In 2022, the calabaceado dance was declared Cultural Heritage of Baja California.
The opening of the Baja California cultural festival in Los Pinos in the Plaza de las Jacarandas will be at 11:00 a.m. and will feature Elisa Lemus, director of the Los Pinos Cultural Complex, and Alma Delia Ábrego, Secretary of Culture of Baja California, among other guests.
The activities, featuring 30 artists, chefs, artisans, and cultural promoters, as part of the Mexico in Los Pinos initiative, will take place both days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., at the space located at Molino del Rey 252, in the first section of Chapultepec Park.
New York's Met to exhibit over 200 Egyptian pieces
Latin Press
La Jornada Newspaper, Saturday, August 2, 2025, p. 5
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Met) announced that more than 200 original pieces, including sculptures and artifacts, featuring images of the gods of Ancient Egypt will be exhibited at the institution.
Starting October 12, the Divine Egypt exhibition will explore the spirituality and religious art of this distant, yet attractive and enigmatic civilization.
It will feature spiritual representations of these deities in temples, sanctuaries, and tombs, as well as the instruments that gave them life in daily worship, establishing a connection between the real and divine worlds. The works on display range from monumental statues to small, elegant figurines symbolizing 25 of the major idols of that era, including the falcon-headed god Horus; the lion-headed Sakhmet; and the great creator for the Egyptians, Ra, among others.
The museum's executive director, Max Hollein, noted that the exhibition brings together the finest works on loan from some of the world's leading institutions, including the Fine Arts Museum in Boston, the Louvre in Paris, and the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen, although more than 140 of those objects belong to the Met itself, he noted.
The gallery highlighted that one of its most significant pieces is a solid gold statue of the god Amun, which will adorn a recreation of a divine barque
, a type of vessel that transported the main deity of a temple.
Aiming to examine the ways in which the kings and people of Ancient Egypt recognized and interacted with their gods, each exhibition section will offer an immersive opportunity to provide a window into the thought and spirituality of one of history's most enduring and sophisticated civilizations.
The exhibition highlights the profound sense of continuity and renewal with which the Egyptians addressed the great mysteries of life and death, anchoring their answers in the visual and symbolic richness of their religious art, the Met concluded.
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