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THE
IDEAL AND THE REAL: Campesino art from Solentiname, Nicaragua
October 7 to November 8, 2002
Eighteen Nicaraguan artists will present “The
Ideal and the Real,” campesino art from Solentiname, Nicaragua,
Oct. 7 to Nov. 8 at the Simmons College Trustman Art Gallery,
fourth floor, Main College Building, 300 The Fenway. There will
be a reception from 4:30–6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 15, with
a gallery talk at 5 p.m. by Solentiname artist Elena Pineda and
John Brentlinger, founder of the Solentiname Friendship Group.
The event is free and open to the public.
A variety of Solentiname artists, including
Elena Pineda, Yelba Ubau, Rudolfo Arellano and Fransico Altamiran,
contributed to the colorful and imaginative paintings and balsa
wood sculptures in the exhibit.
Solentiname is an archipelago of 38 islands
in Lake Nicaragua, where approximately 1,000 people make their
living from agriculture, fishing, and the arts. In the mid-1960s,
the Nicaraguan priest and poet, Ernesto Cardenal, founded a small
spiritual community in Solentiname, chosen for its beauty, tranquility,
and isolation. At that time, the campesinos, or farmers, were
miserably poor, and Cardenal began to introduce them to various
crafts in an effort to improve their situation. Painting about
the struggles of daily life and the beautiful natural surroundings
flourished in the community.
During the 1980s Sandinista revolution, Cardenal
was the minister of culture, and he further promoted the development
of art in Solentiname with exhibitions of Solentiname painting
in Nicaragua, Europe, Latin America, and Asia. Calendars, greeting
cards and books made the work known throughout the world. A sawmill
was built on the islands and woodworking crafts began to flourish
as well. The social, cultural and economic life of the people
of Solentiname was transformed. Today, there are more than fifty
painters and artisans working on the islands.
Since the electoral defeat of the Sandinistas
in 1990, the Nicaraguan government no longer supports or promotes
art, except in a token manner. The Solentiname painters and craftspeople
have organized their own association, as well as the Solentiname
Gallery in Managua, and have continued painting, exhibiting, and
selling their work to a national and international audience. Women
artists represent the majority of the memberships of the Solentiname
Association of Painters and Artisans.
Exhibit hours are from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. The gallery is wheelchair accessible. For
more information, contact Christine Kromer at 617-521-2268.
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