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Awesome Incredible Day of the Dead
Stoneware Skull with Candle Scented Inside
This skull is one of the most interesting ones that you are going to find anywhere. It has a scented candle inside, and when
you burn it down, you can just replace it with a scented votive candle and you are back in business.. You are not going to find
another exactly like this one, either, because I having
these made especially for me. This a made of stoneware - natural clay, mined by hand from riverbanks - and it is from Mexico,
and it is a traditional item, connected to the Day of the
Dead and the cults of the dead of the MesoAmerican Indians. This comes is three sizes.
Mexican curanderos often use skulls as "dwelling places" for the souls of dead martyrs, mostly, who are their spirit guides, such
that this is useful as a conjuring device in that sense. However, I have to warn people not to practice conjuring without the
proper guidance, as we believe that if you "open the doors to the spirit world" without proper protection, a lot of bad things can
happen to you.
These skulls have scented candles inside. You can replace them when they burn out just by
dropping a small, scented votive candle inside.
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Day of Dead art, specifically the use of calaveras as a
way of burlesquing persons and institutions which were normally protected by censorship laws is a tradition that goes back very
far, with both roots in the European and Indian traditions of Mexico. The Indian roots are mostly with the dual nature deities,
whose “death side” was indicated by skeletal figures - the most famous survivor of that tradition is “La
Santisima Muerte”. She is rooted in the cult of an Indian goddess whom the Aztecs called Mictlancihuatl - the name
means “Lady of Death”. The European roots
go back to the danse macabre and to the work of Hans Holbien the Younger - of whom the great Mexican illustrator Guadalupe
Posada might be said to have carried on his traditions and brought them back to life. Posada was “rediscovered”
by Diego Rivera, who promoted Posada in order to attach his own shining star to the calavera artist’s legend. His
fascination with Posada was culminated with the completion of the mural, “Dream on a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda
Park” has a rendition of the Catrina -
Posada’s most famous calavera - in the middle of the scene, and even has a portrait of Posada there. Posada’s
interest in this subject, however, was probably brought about through the influence of the German Jewish exiled art critic Paul
Westheim, who is the man who is really behind all of this interest in the Day of the Dead and in Posada. His book “La
Calavera” is the most important book every written on the subject, in my opinion, and it pretty much sums up what
Diego was originally exposed to when he was first enlighted on the the importance of Day of the Dead art in Mexico.
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This is three and a half inches high! And it is GORGEOUS!!
From Fausto's Art Gallery in Ojinaga,
Chihuahua. (Shipped from Presidio, Texas)
The small one is 3 inches high. $5.99
The medium one is 4 inches high. $7.99
The large one is 5 inches high. $9.99
Select size. Select all three and save money! Shipping and handling is $4.50
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