
Virgin of Guadalupe
This is an original painting by Bryant "Eduardo" Holman, of Ojinaga, Chihuahua, home of Fausto's
Art Gallery. It is done in the folk art style of the South of Mexico, with the frame modeled after the
famous lacquer work of the state of Guerrero. The piece has a thick layer of acrylic over a paste
board backing, which has the basic design scratched into the surface, and after that it is has
layers of color applied with more acrylic paints - altogether a very laborious and time consuming
process.
The Virgin of Guadalupe is the most famous saint in Mexico - the patron saint of Mexico, in fact.
Known as the “Virgen Morena” - the brown skin virgin- Guadalupe was supposedly first
encountered on the Hill of Tepeyac in what is now Mexico City only a few short years after the
Spanish Conquest, by an Aztec Indian, Juan Diego, who was told to go and tell the bishop to
build a temple on the spot where he first saw her. It happens that this spot is the same location
where the temple of Tonantzin (“Our Lady” in the Aztec dialect, Nahuatl) was located. Tonantzin,
on the other hand, was the recreation of an earlier Mother Goddess of the Indians who had been
in the Valley of Mexico long before the arrival of the Aztecs.
In 1531 a "Lady from Heaven" appeared to a poor Indian at Tepeyac, a hill northwest of Mexico
City; she identified herself as the Mother of the True God, instructed him to have the bishop build
a temple on the site and left an image of herself imprinted miraculously on his tilma, a poor
quality cactus-cloth, which should have deteriorated in 20 years but shows no sign of decay 469
years later and still defies all scientific explanations of its origin.
It apparently even reflects in her eyes what was in front of her in 1531!
Her message of love and compassion, and her universal promise of help and protection to all
mankind, as well as the story of the apparitions, are described in the "Nican Mopohua", a 16th
century document written in the native Nahuatl language.
There is reason to believe that at Tepeyac Mary came in her glorified body, and her actual
physical hands rearranged the roses in Juan Diego’s tilma, which makes this apparition very
special.
An incredible list of miracles, cures and interventions are attributed to Her. Yearly, an estimated
10 million visit her Basilica, making her Mexico City home the most popular Marian shrine in the
world, and the most visited Catholic church in the world next to the Vatican.
Altogether 24 popes have officially honored Our Lady of Guadalupe. His Holiness John Paul II
visited her Sanctuary four times: on his first apostolic trip outside Rome as Pope in 1979, and
again in 1990, 1999 and 2002.
The Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe is celebrated on December 12th. In 1999, Pope John Paul II,
in his homily from the Solemn Mass at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, during his third
visit to the sanctuary, declared the date of December the 12th as a Liturgical Holy Day for the
whole continent.
The origin of the name Guadalupe has always been a matter of controversy. It is nevertheless
believed that the name came about because of the translation from Nahuatl to Spanish of the
words used by the Virgin during the apparition to Juan Bernardino, the ailing uncle of Juan Diego.
It is believed that Our Lady used the Aztec Nahuatl word of coatlaxopeuh which is pronounced
"quatlasupe" and sounds remarkably like the Spanish word Guadalupe. Coa meaning serpent, tla
being the noun ending which can be interpreted as "the", while xopeuh means to crush or stamp
out. So Our Lady must have called herself the one "who crushes the serpent."
We must remember that the Aztecs offered annually at least 20,000 men, women and children in
human sacrifice to their gods. In 1487, just in a single 4 days long ceremony for the dedication of
a new temple in Tenochtitlan, some 80,000 captives were killed in human sacrifice.
Certainly, in this case She crushed the serpent, and few years later millions of the natives were
converted to Christianity.
"Let not your heart be disturbed. Do not fear that sickness, nor any other sickness or
anguish. Am I not here, who is your Mother? Are you not under my protection? Am I not your
health? Are you not happily within my fold? What else do you wish? Do not grieve nor be
disturbed by anything."
(Words of Our Lady to Juan Diego)
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The frame is made with recycled wood - Mexican fruit crates - or “rejas” as they are called.
To pay by check or money order, print this page our and then send it in with your payment
to:
Fausto's Art Gallery
POB 470
Presidio, TX 79845
From Fausto's Art Gallery in Ojinaga, Chihuahua.
Cost: $39.99
$8.00 dollars shipping and handling
Out of stock
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