The virtual events are available for viewing on the World Heritage Office YouTube channel and the Mission Marquee Facebook page.
VIRTUAL DIA DE LOS MUERTOS ALTAR FREE
event is free with registration.Īlso part of the World Heritage Office’s celebration is an outdoor exhibit at the Mission Marquee presenting the work of 11 San Antonio artists who gained access to archives of descendants of mission families and represented their history in painted images.Ĭurator and artist Rigoberto Luna said, “The opportunity to work directly with descendant families made all the more special because these stories are not only essential to the mission communities, but also to the fabric of San Antonio’s history.” 2 Tamal Institute will feature an introduction by author Carmen Tafolla and a cooking demonstration by the Familia de la Torre. 1, Mission San José celebrates its 300-year anniversary with a discussion on the history and traditions of the holiday and performances by Mariachi Alma de Mexico and Compania Folklorica del Alamo. 1-2 focused on Mission Marquee Plaza and the Día de los Muertos’ tamál tradition.īeginning at 4 p.m. The World Heritage Office of the City of San Antonio will present a two-day virtual event Nov. Credit: Courtesy / Ramin Samandari History and memory Grupo La Gloria crosses Elmendorf Lake during the procession. Normally, the troupe would perform at such locations as the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center, or the Mexican Cultural Institute, or Hemisfair, but this year it chose Elmendorf Lake as the setting for its solemn but light-filled procession to honor those who have passed on. Each year since October 1984, the performance troupe has staged its processional dirge for Día de los Muertos, and 2020 will be the first time it has been unable to perform for a live audience, said George Cisneros, its music and media director. 30 on KSAT, which was pre-recorded in the early morning hours of Oct. Urban-15 participated in the Grupo La Gloria virtual river parade to be broadcast Oct. The virtual teatro ritual will maintain the tradition of Danza Mexica Chichimeca teachings that were exchanged through migration on this continent prior to colonization and settler civilizations, she said. 8, in part to honor elder Jefe Manolo Sánchez of Grupo Teokalli, who died from COVID-19 earlier this year. Kalpulli Ayolopaktzin will create on online presentation planned for viewing on its Facebook page Nov. “The whole purpose of our traditions is to preserve life and to preserve our teaching for our future generations, and we can’t do that if we’re not taking care of ourselves,” said. That means isolating even during a time when loved ones would normally gather. “Our elders across the continent … have told us that during this time, our responsibilities are to take care of our home fireplaces, our home altars,” she said. Whoops! There was an error and we couldn't process your subscription. Instead, she and her children will spend the holiday at her mother’s home in San Antonio, to recognize ancestors and lost loved ones. The Kalpulli Ayolopaktzin community organization would normally be presenting its teatro ritual performances throughout the city in recognition of the ancient Día de los Muertos tradition, matriarchal spokesperson Laura Yohualtlahuiz said.
1 on the Muertos Fest website.Ĭommunity members are encouraged to contribute images of loved ones for possible inclusion in the virtual altar segment of its programming. 31 broadcast on channel CW35 at 7 p.m., with a rebroadcast Nov. 30 virtual Day of the Dead river parade presented by Grupo La Gloria, other online-only events will include Muertos Fest 2020, which moved from La Villita to Hemisfair last year and now moves to KMYS for an Oct. With Love and Death in Times of Pandemic, Zamora Casas ties together multiple pandemics, including the global AIDS pandemic, which cost 690,000 lives worldwide in 2019, according to the World Health Organization. 2 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., and for in-person viewing with by reservation only on select weekends beginning Nov. The altar will be created by Jon Hinojosa, executive director of SAY Sí, with help from other members of the organization, and community members are asked to contribute virtually via a SAY Sí app.īihl Haus Arts invited installation artist David Zamora Casas, noted for his elaborate altars, to create a coronavirus-themed altar for online viewing Nov. The Pearl will continue its annual community altar tradition, with an “Amor y Esperanza” themed altar honoring loved ones lost to COVID-19.