Exvoto Mexican Folk Art Painting - Nude Skeleton Woman with Man in Traje Jarocho

$85.00

12" x 9"

A vibrant exvoto folk art  painting by Christopher Rodriguez Contreras. A contemporary artist that tells a tale of gratitude. Contreras offers a window into the everyday life of the common people of Mexico through tales once told. Acrylic on tin. Signed "CR 24" bottom right. "Tina P" on verso. Some minor scratches to painting. 

Translation: Nicanor Morales gives infinite thanks and gives homage to this miracle that his wife that caused him no harm upon turning into a skeleton. But she did give me a fright. Polanco , September 27, 1987

The term exvoto comes from the Latin referring to a vow or promise. It is an offering made to a divinity to give thanks for the assistance. In Europe, this tradition started in 15th-century Italy. During Spanish rule, Mexicans adopted a creative way to thank the saints, the Virgin Mary, or holy figures for their help with miracles or the supernatural. The  ingenious exvotos are often moving and sometimes express humor through gratitude. The tradition started in the upper classes, by the 18th century, it reached the rest of the population where it adopted a form of paintings on wood or metal sheets. 

Cuidad de Mexico

Contemporary