Time in Things II. Contemporary Art Galleries
Popol Vuh | Time in Things II. Contemporary Art Galleries | Museo Amparo, Puebla

Popol Vuh

Artist(s)
Year 2017
Technique Codex technique
Record number 2017.C.0144-046
Period Twenty-first Century
Location Gallery 5. Pulses and Transgressions
Researcher

This selection of pieces was part of the exhibition "Taco de ojo": Tlacuilo, presented at the Amparo Museum in 2017. The exhibition brought together the work of thirty-seven Latin American creators from the Latino Toons international collective, focused on the graphic narrative of comics, illustration and augmented reality, to represent Latin American cultures of origin with the intention of generating diverse discussions.
 
Through the publication of a magazine entitled "Taco de ojo", the collective – founded in 2013 by fanzine cartoonists Andre Ducci (Brazil), Jorge Perez-Ruibal (Peru), Tomas Ives (Chile), Marco Toxico (Bolivia), Mr. Glaubitz (Mexico) and NAVA as publisher – champions the cause of Latin American poetry, graphic art and comic strips without borders. Its name, "Taco de ojo", refers to the Mexican concept of eating with the eyes, of satiating yourself with the gaze upon a beautiful thing.

For more information, you can consult the information on the exhibition Taco de ojo: Tlacuilo, held at the Museo Amparo in 2017

This selection of pieces was part of the exhibition "Taco de ojo": Tlacuilo, presented at the Amparo Museum in 2017. The exhibition brought together the work of thirty-seven Latin American creators from the Latino Toons international collective, focused on the graphic narrative of comics, illustration and augmented reality, to represent Latin American cultures of origin with the intention of generating diverse discussions.
 
Through the publication of a magazine entitled "Taco de ojo", the collective – founded in 2013 by fanzine cartoonists Andre Ducci (Brazil), Jorge Perez-Ruibal (Peru), Tomas Ives (Chile), Marco Toxico (Bolivia), Mr. Glaubitz (Mexico) and NAVA as publisher – champions the cause of Latin American poetry, graphic art and comic strips without borders. Its name, "Taco de ojo", refers to the Mexican concept of eating with the eyes, of satiating yourself with the gaze upon a beautiful thing.

--Works in this gallery --

Time in Things II. Contemporary Art Galleries